SKY · IDENTIFY · ITALY

What's That in the Sky Over Rome?

See a bright “star,” a steady glowing point, or something you can't place over Rome? Pick the direction you're facing and we'll name the brightest objects that way right now — computed live for Rome's coordinates (41.9°, 12.5°).

WHAT'S IN THE SKY OVER ROME NOW

The Sun is up where you are, so only the Moon (and rarely Venus) can be seen right now. The list below is what would be in that part of the sky after dark.

WHICH WAY ARE YOU LOOKING?
Most likely VegaSTAR
Brilliant blue-white, near overhead on summer evenings; a corner of the Summer Triangle.WNW · 41° up · western sky
CapellaSTAR
A bright yellow star high in the north on winter evenings.NE · 26° up · north-eastern sky
MarsPLANET
A noticeably reddish-orange "star" that shines steadily.E · 30° up · eastern sky
SaturnPLANET
A steady yellowish point, fainter than Jupiter — its rings need a telescope.SE · 43° up · south-eastern sky
AltairSTAR
Bright star straddling the equator; completes the Summer Triangle.WSW · 37° up · south-western sky
AldebaranSTAR
An orange star marking the Bull's eye, near the Pleiades.E · 15° up · eastern sky
IS IT MOVING OR FLASHING?

A point of light that drifts steadily across the sky in a minute or two — not twinkling, no flashing lights — is a satellite (often the ISS or a Starlink train). A blinking light moving in a straight line is an aircraft. The objects above don't move noticeably over a few minutes.

The list is ordered brightest-first and updates through the night. A planet shines with a steady light; a star twinkles; a point that drifts across the sky in a minute or two is a satellite. Best viewing is once the sky is fully dark — check our stargazing conditions for Rome.

Rome right now

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