AQUILA

Aquila, which occupies most of the center of the picture, is best marked by bright (first magnitude) Altair at upper center, the star flanked by two outliers (Alshain, to the left, and Tarazed right), which together give the sense of the flying Eagle. (North is toward the upper right.) The three stars are actually depicted as marking the Eagle's back and neck. A straight line passed through the three stars down and left points to Theta Aquilae. Eta Aquilae is to the left and a bit down from Theta; Delta is the second modestly bright star below Tarazed, whereas Sigma is directly below Altair. The Eagle's tail is indicated by the two stars at toward the upper right that together are called Deneb al Okab (Zeta left, Epsilon right). Altair lies at the southern apex of the Summer Triangle. Serpens (Serpens Cauda) ends at Alya, seen at lower right. In December of 1999, the constellation was graced by a naked eye nova.

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See the Milky Way to the north in in Cygnus.

See the Milky Way farther south in Scutum and Aquila.

See Aquila from Bayer's Uranometria of 1603.