Michigan
Sky Map
This map shows the locations of the planets, stars, moon, and sun
from any location and for any date and time. It is suitable for
most naked-eye observations. The default map is set for Lansing,
Michigan (Lat. 43 Lon. -85) at the current time on your computer.
Introductory
Notes
The program needs to know your location in order to predict
what the sky will look like. Initially, it is set for Lansing,
Michigan (Lat 43 Lon -85). You can set your location either
by typing in your latitude and longitude or by choosing a city
from the list (which only includes those with populations greater
than 3 million).
Use 24-hour time for setting the time, e.g. 13:00 means 1 pm.
In the U.S., daylight savings time lasts from 2 am on the first
Sunday of April until 2 am on the last Sunday of October. The
program handles this by default. If you are not in the U.S.,
you may need to set daylight savings time manually.
The compass directions may look wrong, but that it because
the screen represents the way the sky looks when you look straight
up. The compass directions are therefore a mirror image of the
compass directions on a map, which represents a view of the
land looking down from above.
The spherical sky has to be projected onto the flat screen.
This projection produces distortion, just as a map of the earth
inevitably has some distortion. The greatest distortion occurs
near the horizon.
The disks of the sun, moon, and planets are not drawn to scale.
Their brightness's are given as magnitudes to the right of their
names. A more negative magnitude means a brighter planet. The
magnitudes given for Saturn do not include the brightness of
the rings, so Saturn will usually be brighter than indicated.
This program is only designed to have a limited degree of accuracy,
sufficient for most naked-eye astronomy applications.
Provided by LightandMatter.com