Download this month's binocular and deep-sky tour charts. The charts are printed in black on white so they can be viewed under red light at your telescope.
Record your observations of Jupiter, Mars, Saturn, Venus and the Sun with our handy printable forms.
If you observe the Sun, remember NEVER to look at it with your naked eye; either project it through your telescope or use a solar filter on your telescope's front lens.
The Cone Nebula and Christmas Tree Cluster, by Bill Lowry, Chiddingstone Hoath, Kent, UK, 2–4 January and 26 March 2025. Equipment: ZWO ASI2600MM Pro camera, William Optics GT-81 IV refractor, Sky-Watcher EQ6-R Pro mount. Exposure: Ha 10x 1,200”, OIII 21x 1,200”, SII 14x 1,200”, LRGB 40x 30” each, total 13h 20’. Software: PixInsight
Solar prominence
Djaffar Ould Abdeslam, Alsace, France, 12 October 2025
Equipment: ZWO ASI174MM camera, Lunt 60mm solar telescope, iOptron HAE43 mount
Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon)
Giorgia Hofer, Croda da Campo, Belluno, Italy, 28 October 2025
Equipment: Nikon D750 camera, Sigma 85mm lens, Vixen Polarie Star Tracker mount
The Pacman Nebula, NGC 281
Nicole Poersch, Prestwick, South Ayrshire, Scotland, 18 November 2024-30 January 2025
Equipment: ZWO ASI294MM Pro camera, Altair Starwave ASCENT 115 ED refractor, Sky-Watcher AZ-EQ5GT mount
Aurora borealis
Jamie Vince, Altnaharra, Scotland, 18 October 2025
Equipment: Sony A7 III camera, Tamron 17-28mm lens, Rangers RA115 tripod
The Moon
Nayyar Badu, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, 12 October 2025
Equipment: Nikon D5500 and ZWO ASI120MM-S cameras, Sky-Watcher Explorer 130P-DS reflector, Sky-Watcher EQ5 Pro mount
The Triangulum Galaxy, M33
Ron Brecher, Guelph, Ontario, Canada, 18 August-20 October 2025
Equipment: QHY168C Pro camera, Sky-Watcher Esprit 120 ED Pro refractor, Sky-Watcher Wave-150i mount
The Dragon’s Egg Nebula, NGC 6164
Oleg Shargorodsky, Rio Hurtado, Chile, 3 June 2025
Equipment: QHY600 Pro camera, AstroPhysics Star130 ED refractor, 10Micron GM1000 HPS mount
Spiral galaxy NGC 2336
Kimberly Sibbald, Alberta, Canada, 22-24 April and 2 May 2025
Equipment: QHY268M camera, PlaneWave CDK14 astrograph, Mesu 200 MKII mount
Starlink satellite trails
Chao Wang, Ulanqab City, Inner Mongolia, China, 2 June 2025
Equipment: Nikon D750 camera, Sigma Art 14mm lens, Marsace ET-2541s tripod
Barnard’s E Nebula, LDN 694
John Chumack, Yellow Springs, Ohio, USA, 27 September 2025
Equipment: ZWO ASI294MC camera, Celestron RASA 8 astrograph, ZWO AM5 mount
Comet C/2025 A6 (Lemmon)
Hassan Abdollahabadi, Rivash Mountains, Iran, 26 October 2025
Equipment: Canon EOS R6 camera, Samyang 135mm lens, Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer GTi mount
The Elephant’s Trunk Nebula
Terry Hancock, Whitewater, Colorado, USA, 28 October 2025
Equipment: QHY600M camera, Takahashi Epsilon-180ED astrograph, Paramount ME mount
Star trails
Fernando Menezes, San Quirico d'Orcia, Tuscany, Italy, 29 September 2025
Equipment: Canon EOS 6D camera, Canon 24mm lens, Sky-Watcher AZ-GTi mount
Globular cluster M54
Massimo Di Fusco, captured remotely via Chilescope, Atacama desert, Chile, 15 August 2025
Equipment: FLI PL16803 camera, ASA 500 reflector, ASA DDM85 mount
Cone Nebula and Christmas Tree Cluster
Andrei Pleskatsevich, Minsk, Belarus, 3 October 2025
Equipment: ATR2600KPA camera, SharpStar 76EDPH refractor, iOptron GEM28 mount
The Question Mark Nebula, NGC 7822
Greg Meyer, Kenton, Oklahoma, USA, 21-27 September 2025
Equipment: ZWO ASI2600MM camera, Radian Raptor 61 astrograph, ZWO AM5 mount
The Cygnus Wall
Michael Glazier, Crawley, West Sussex, 14 September and 8 October 2025
Equipment: ZWO ASI585MC Air camera, Askar 71F refractor, Sky-Watcher EQ-AL55i mount
The North America Nebula
Barry Marriott, Warrington, Cheshire, 12-16 August and 8 September 2025
Equipment: Canon EOS 250D camera, Askar FMA230 refractor, Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer GTi mount
The Moon
Roberto Ortu, Cabras, Sardinia Italy, 7 October 2025
Equipment: QHY5L-II-C camera, Celestron FirstScope 114 reflector, Sky-Watcher EQ2 mount
Eye On The Sky
This new NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope Picture of the Month features a cosmic creepy-crawly called NGC 6537 — the Red Spider Nebula. Using its Near-InfraRed Camera (NIRCam), Webb has revealed never-before-seen details in this picturesque planetary nebula with a rich backdrop of thousands of stars. Planetary nebulae like the Red Spider Nebula form when ordinary stars like the Sun reach the end of their lives. After ballooning into cool red giants, these stars shed their outer layers and cast them into space, exposing their white-hot cores. Ultraviolet light from the central star ionises the cast-off material, causing it to glow. The planetary nebula phase of a star’s life is as fleeting as it is beautiful, lasting only a few tens of thousands of years. The central star of the Red Spider Nebula is visible in this image, glowing just brighter than the webs of dusty gas that surround it. The surprising nature of the nebula’s tremendously hot and luminous central star has been revealed by Webb’s NIRCam. In optical-wavelength images, such as from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, the star appears faint and blue. But in the NIRCam images, it shows up as red: thanks to its sensitive near-infrared capabilities, Webb has revealed a shroud of hot dust surrounding the central star. This hot dust likely orbits the central star, in a disc structure. Though only a single star is visible in the Red Spider’s heart, a hidden companion star may lurk there as well. A stellar companion could explain the nebula’s shape, including its characteristic narrow waist and wide outflows. This hourglass shape is seen in other planetary nebulae such as the Butterfly Nebula, which Webb also recently observed. Webb’s new view of the Red Spider Nebula reveals for the first time the full extent of the nebula’s outstretched lobes, which form the ‘legs’ of the spider. These lobes, shown in blue, are traced by light emitted from H2 molecules, which contain two hydrogen
Martian meteorite Phippsaksla
Perseverance Mars Rover, 13 November 2025
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU
Emission nebulae RCW 94 and RCW 95
VLT Survey Telescope (VST)/VISTA, 31 October 2025
Credit: ESO/VPHAS+ team/VVV team
Dark cloud LDN 1641
Euclid Space Telescope, 5 November 2025
Credit: ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA, image processing by M. Schirmer (MPIA, Heidelberg)
4MOST first-light
VISTA, 21 October 2025
Credit: AIP/Background: Harshwardhan Pathak/Telescope Live
Supernova SN 2024ggi
Very Large Telescope, 12 November 2025
Credit: ESO/Y. Yang et al.
Software
Download all of this month's software in a zip folder.
Argo Navis Deep-Sky Tour
This month's deep-sky tour plan file can be imported into the Argo Navis Digital Telescope Computer using Argonaut software, a free utility available from Wildcard Innovations. Using Argo Navis with this month's deep-sky tour plan file, you can:
• display essential information from the Argo Navis database for each object
• slew your telescope to each object in the plan - requires a compatible mount.
• push your telescope to each object in the plan using the coordinates provided on the Argo Navis display.
To import this month's deep-sky tour plan file into Argo Navis using Argonaut software:
Download and save the file to your hard drive.
Run the Argonaut utility program and transfer the plan into your Argo Navis DTC.
This month's Deep-Sky Tour plan file is produced by Deep-Sky Planner 8 (see knightware.biz/dsp).
Copyright Wildcard Innovations Pty Ltd.
Deep-Sky Planner
This month's Deep-Sky Tour plan file is produced by Deep-Sky Planner 9 (see knightware.biz/dsp).
Copyright Wildcard Innovations Pty Ltd.
License type Full software Platform Windows Versions 10, 11
Deep-Sky Planner 9astronomy software for Windows provides the tools you need to make your time at the telescope more efficient and enjoyable.
Sort the objects in the plan according to the best time and order to view each object.
Slew your ASCOM-compatible Go-To mount to each object in the plan - requires ASCOM software (free).
Show a sky chart centred on each object in the plan using one of the top planetarium software titles – requires TheSky, Starry Night, Redshift, Cartes du Ciel (free) or Stellarium (free).
Record your observation in the open, non-proprietary observing log.
Details about Deep-Sky Planner and how to purchase can be found here.
Download the Deep-Sky Planner compatible file of this month's deep-sky tour observing plan file so that you can visit each object directly with Deep-Sky Planner.
Save the file to your hard drive and double click it to open it in Deep-Sky Planner.
EQTOUR
If you are one of the many astronomers who use the ASCOM driver EQMOD to control your ASCOM-compatible Go-To mount, you can use an add-on application called EQTOUR to call up various sets of sky tours like Messier, Caldwell, Globular Clusters and simply click on an object name to slew to it.
Details about the application and how to download it free of charge can be found here.
Download the EQTOUR compatible file of our monthly Deep-sky tour, so that you can visit each object directly from your EQMod control panel. We've also included a PDF document that explains the system and how to get it installed with your telescope setup.
Copy the .lst file from the folder that appears into the same directory as the EQTOUR application file, EQTOUR.exe, and follow the instructions in the link above.
SkySafari
License type Full software
Platform iOS, Android
Versions 4 or later (Plus or Pro editions)
This month's deep-sky tour plan file can be imported into SkySafari software, available from Simulation Curriculum.
Using this month's deep-sky tour plan file on SkySafari, you can:
• view each object in SkySafari's night sky simulation view
• display essential information from the SkySafari database for each object
• slew your telescope to each object in the plan - requires a compatible mount.
To import this month's deep-sky tour plan file into SkySafari, please see the SkySafari user manual for your device platform and version of SkySafari.
This month's Deep-Sky Tour plan file is produced by Deep-Sky Planner 8.
Watch the Sky at Night
You can watch the latest episode of The Sky Night, plus previous episodes and historic programmes from the archive, via the BBC Four Sky at Night webpage.