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Ephemeris: 04/09/2026 – Finding Leo the lion

April 9, 2026 Leave a comment

This is Ephemeris for Thursday, April 9th. Today the Sun will be up for 13 hours and 11 minutes, setting at 8:20, and it will rise tomorrow at 7:07. The Moon, 1 day before last quarter, will rise at 3:58 tomorrow morning.

At 10 p.m. the spring constellation of Leo the lion will be high in the south-southeast. It can be found by locating the Big Dipper high in the northeast and imagining that a hole were drilled in the bowl to let the water leak out. It would drip on the back of this giant cat. The Lion is standing or lying facing westward. His head and mane are seen in the stars as a backwards question mark. This group of stars is also called the sickle. The bright star Regulus is at the bottom, the dot at the bottom of the question mark. A triangle of stars, to the left of Regulus, is the lion’s haunches. Leo contains some nice galaxies visible in moderate sized telescopes. The stars in Leo’s part of the sky are fewer than those in the winter sky.

The astronomical event times given in this blog are for the Traverse City/Interlochen area of Michigan (Lat 44.7° N, Long 85.7° W; EST, UT – 5 hours) unless stated otherwise. Times will be different for other locations.

Addendum

Leaky Dipper drips on Leo
Leaky Big Dipper drips on Leo. The positions in the sky are for early evening local time, or about 1½ hours after sunset. The little distorted cross at the top of the image marks the zenith. Look high in the east and east-southeast to see these stars. Created using my LookingUp program, GIMP and LibreOffice.