Home Deepsky Atlas TheAstronews Links Solar System
HAS Logo

Hawaiian Astronomical Society

Constellations: Cetus -- The Sea Monster of Ethiopia

Myth

Cetus is the monster sent by the gods to terrorize Andromeda, Cepheus and Cassiopeia. Perseus rescued her. For more details, click here.

Maps

Each map can be clicked on to produce a 909x1199 version of it. They sport red labels, which look good on screen, but which disappear when used with red flashlights. Each map, therefore has a second link to a map better suited for printing in a graphics program, and using in the field. While they are quite large, they are all about 30-40k, and so are easy to view at today's modem speeds. The first map is a wide area view of the constellation, suitable for naked eye browsing. The next views are binocular width, showing stars to mag. 10, and labeling deepsky objects to magnitude 12.

Interactive, wide area map of Cetus

Map thumbnail

Click the map for a 909x1199 version of the above. Click here for a map better suited for use in the field.

North-East Section

Map thumbnail

This is the north-east section of the constellation. The map displays stars to magnitude 10, and deepsky objects to magnitude 12. Click here for a map better suited for use in the field.

South-East Section

Map thumbnail

Click here for a map better suited for use in the field.

South-West Region

Map thumbnail

Click here for a map better suited for use in the field.

Images

Image thumbnail 75k JPEG M77 (NGC1068, Bennett 9) is a very bright (mag. 8.8), fairly large (7'), barred spiral located 52' ESE of delta Ceti. The bright, strangely shaped galaxy toward the bottom of the picture, Dreyer reports this one as highly condensed. The highly elongated (8'x3') galaxy 31' to the NW is NGC1055. It shines at mag. 11.6. NGC1072 lies 23' to the NE, shines at mag. 14.2 and covers 90"x30". Countless other galaxies inhabit this picture from the Digital Sky Survey.
Map Printable Map More info.

Image thumbnail 30k Labeled JPEG NGC936 (Best 24) anchors the western end of three galaxies that lie within 44' of each other. It lies midway just north of a line drawn between Delta Ceti and Mira (Omicron Ceti). Dreyer describes it as very bright, very large, round, with a much brighter nucleus. Although this is a barred spiral, amateur telescopes of any size will have trouble seeing the bar.

Dreyer describes NGC941 as very faint (mag. 13), quite large (2.6'x2.0'), and round. This one is difficult, but still possible in a 6".

NGC955 is described as fairly bright (mag. 13), small (2.8' x 0.7'), extended (in p.a. 19°), with a fairly abruptly brighter middle. A 6" will only show the middle. Larger aperture will reveal a stellar core, and the elongation. It lies only 24' west of the mag. 5.4 star 75 Ceti.

Image from the Digital Sky Survey.
Map Printable Map 367k JPEG

Image thumbnail 34k GIF NGC450 is a very faint mag. 12.1 galaxy in the north-central portion of the constellation. Located 2° SSE of NGC428, you can find it on the south-west region map. UGC807 (mag. 15.8) is the companion.
Map Printable Map

Image thumbnail 33k JPEG IC1613 (Caldwell 51) is a faint (mag. 9.8), extremely large (11'x9') irregular galaxy located in a barren area in the far north-central portion of the constellation, near the Pisces border. Image from the Digital Sky Survey. High contrast optics help with this member of the Local Group.
Map Printable Map

Image thumbnail 38k JPEG NGC247 (Bennett 3, Caldwell 62) is a faint (mag. 9.7), extremely large (20'x7'), very much elongated (P.A. 172°) spiral galaxy located 2.8° SSE of Diphda (Beta Ceti). Image from the Digital Sky Survey.
Map Printable Map

Image thumbnail 49k JPEG NGC246 (Best 23, Caldwell 56) is a very faint (mag. 8), large (240"x210") planetary nebula located 6.3° north of Diphda (Beta Ceti). Dreyer reports 4 stars shining in the nebulosity. NGC255 is a mag. 12.4 spiral galaxy located 30' north-east of the planetary. The much fainter MCG-2-3-9 (mag. 14.5) lies the same distance to the north-west. Image from the Digital Sky Survey.
Map Printable Map

__________________________________

If you have any questions about the Hawaiian Astronomical Society
please (link requires javascript).

Return to top of page

Return to Deepsky Atlas home page

Return to HAS home page