If you're based in the Southern Hemisphere and want to know what you can see in the night sky tonight, this page is for you.
Our monthly-updated night-sky guide will show you what you can see in the Southern Hemisphere over the coming weeks.
We'll include monthly highlights, stars, constellations, planets and deep-sky objects.
For more advice, read our guides to Southern Hemipshere stargazing and the best night-sky targets to see in Australia.
Highlights
Mars is at opposition on 16 January. While not as close to Earth as some oppositions, it still appears around double (14 arcseconds) its typical size.
Even small scopes under high power and good seeing will show some shadowy features, the locations of plains, valleys, mountains and a polar cap.
To the unaided eye, it’s redder and brighter than normal, rivalling the brightest star, Sirius. Watch Mars approach then pass stars Castor and Pollux in the northern evening sky this month.
Stars and constellations
High in the northern evening sky is the heavens’ brightest star, Sirius. Being close to the celestial equator, this ‘Dog Star’ (Alpha (α) Canis Majoris) can be seen from most places on Earth.
However, Southern Hemisphere dwellers have the second-brightest, Canopus, to themselves.
Located 36° south of Sirius, this luminary, along with the nearby False Cross asterism, are great signposts to the amazing Milky Way regions of Carina, Vela and Puppis, now returning to the evening sky.
The Planets
The abundance of planets in the evening Southern Hemisphere sky continues, including luminous Venus still dominating the western sky, setting around 22:00.
Saturn and Neptune follow closely, both departing within an hour after.
Early evening finds Uranus and Jupiter both transiting, an ideal time to observe these outer planets. Mars is rising around sunset and visible all night.
Innermost world Mercury can be seen low in the eastern dawn before being lost to the solar glare in the last week of January.
Deep-sky
This month, we take a cruise down Eridanus, the River. One of the two-dozen fourth-magnitude stars making up this meandering stream is Tau4 (τ4) Eridani (RA 3h 19.5m, dec. –21° 46’), a brilliant multiple star.
Its mag. +4.0 orange primary star has two main companions of mag. + 9.5 and +10.8, 5.9 and 39 arcseconds away, respectively. The brighter pair will need some power (150x) to resolve.
Panning 1.6° east, you’ll discover galaxy NGC 1332. This mag. +10.5 lenticular has a bright stellar nucleus, within a prominent, slightly oval core that fades quickly into a featureless halo (2.5 x 1 arcminutes).
Returning to Tau4, make a hop of 2.3° north to the galaxy NGC 1300. This 10th-magnitude face-on barred spiral shows an oval core extending into a narrow fainter bar (4 arcminutes long) surrounded by a mottled halo (5 x 3 arcminutes).
Southern Hemisphere Star Charts
Access this month's and all previous star charts for the Southern Hemisphere by clicking on the links below.
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart January 2025 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart December 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart November 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart October 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart September 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart August 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart July 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart June 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart May 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart April 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart March 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart February 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart January 2024 (PDF)
Southern Hemisphere Star Chart December 2023 (PDF)