The Pleiades star cluster - aka the Seven Sisters or M45 - is visible from virtually every part of the globe. It looks like a tiny misty dipper of stars.
On June and July evenings, you’ll find the Summer Triangle in the east at nightfall. It swings high overhead in the hours after midnight and sits in the west at daybreak.
Despite its location far in the Southern Hemisphere, the constellation of the Southern Cross is visible to those located in the Northern Hemisphere, as long as you are far enough south and know just when to look.
Most people can spot the Big Dipper easily. To find its smaller counterpart, just follow the end stars in the bowl northward to the Little Dipper. Learn more about these stars!
The Sickle in Leo is an easy-to-spot backward question mark shape made of stars that marks the head and shoulders of the constellation of the lion. The moon sometimes passes in front of the Sickle's brightest star, Regulus.