Stargazr

Aquarius

The water-bearer of the autumn sky

Best on September–November evenings · southern sky.

Aquarius in 3D — drag to look aroundReal catalog positions, brightness & colour

Aquarius is one of the zodiac's oldest constellations, depicting a figure pouring water from a jar. It sprawls across a relatively dim but rewarding patch of the southern autumn sky, with no single blazing star to grab your eye but a satisfying pattern once you know where to look.

How to find it

On autumn evenings, Aquarius sits in the southern sky for northern observers — look between the distinctive Great Square of Pegasus to the north and the lonely bright star Fomalhaut low to the south. Start from the Great Square and drop southward; the two closely matched yellow supergiants Sadalsuud and Sadalmelik mark the water-bearer's shoulder region and serve as your anchors for the rest of the figure.

Brightest stars

Yellow supergiant Sadalsuud (β Aqr) leads at magnitude 2.91, with Sadalmelik (α Aqr) close behind at 2.96 — the two are nearly twins in brightness and color, sitting near each other in the northern part of the constellation. Skat (δ Aqr) at magnitude 3.27 marks the water-bearer's leg.

Worth seeing

The gentle chain of stars including Sadachbia (γ Aqr) near the water jar is the most rewarding naked-eye detail — a delicate curved line that traces the stream of water pouring from the bearer's urn.

☄ Meteor showers radiate from Aquarius. Each year, the Eta Aquariids (peaks around May 6) and the Southern Delta Aquariids (peaks around July 30) appear to stream out of this part of the sky — the radiant sits here.

Frequently asked

When is Aquarius visible?

Aquarius is best seen on autumn evenings, roughly September through November, when it climbs into the southern sky for northern hemisphere observers. Southern hemisphere observers get an even better view, as it passes higher overhead.

What are the brightest stars in Aquarius?

Sadalsuud (magnitude 2.91) and Sadalmelik (2.96) are the two brightest, nearly matched yellow supergiants. Skat (3.27), Albali (3.77), and Sadachbia (3.84) fill out the figure, though none are particularly dazzling.

Which hemisphere is Aquarius best seen from?

Both hemispheres can see it, but southern hemisphere observers have the advantage — Aquarius rides high overhead for them in autumn. Northern observers see it lower in the southern sky, which makes a clear, unobstructed southern horizon helpful.

See Aquarius in tonight's sky. Stargazr's live sky map shows exactly where it is from your location right now, with current cloud and darkness conditions.
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Nearby constellations

Capricornus · Pegasus · Delphinus · Pisces · Aquila · Cetus · Sagittarius · Cygnus

Browse all constellations →