Website Banners - The Night Sky Atlas

The Night Sky Atlas logo image

Planet banner images are available for any website pages you would like to add them to. A small, simple JPEG planets banner, which works anywhere an image can be placed, is available with today's planet positions on the ecliptic.

Just include one of the following image URL anywhere you want it to appear, it is automatically updated daily:

http://www.nightskyatlas.com/planets.jpg

The Night Sky Atlas small planets banner

HTML for small planets banner image:

<img src="http://www.nightskyatlas.com/planets.jpg" width="600" height="50">

HTML for small planets banner image with link to planetary calendar;

<a href="http://www.nightskyatlas.com/planetscal.jsp"><img
src="http://www.nightskyatlas.com/planets.jpg"
align="center" width="600" height="50" border="1"></a>

A larger planets image with data is also available from this image link:

http://www.nightskyatlas.com/planetscal.jsp?graphic=1

The Night Sky Atlas large planets banner

HTML for large planets image:

<img src="http://www.nightskyatlas.com/planetscal.jsp?graphic=1" width="850" height="200">

Tonight's sky images:

Images of tonight's night sky visible from any location on Earth can be obtained from the link below. The link display options are described in the about page and can be created from either the index or the viewer pages main image. TIP: remove the rightAscension=value parameter to use the default, and enter your geographic latitude for the declination=value parameter. Atlas images have flexible width and height sizes.

http://www.nightskyatlas.com/skyatlas.jsp [display options]

Examples:

Tonight's sky from 40°N latitudes with North up:

http://www.nightskyatlas.com/skyatlas.jsp?declination=40.0&viewAngle=120&width=850&height=150&b00=1&b03=1&b04=1&b05=1

Tonight from 40N latitudes

Tonight's sky from 40°S latitudes with South up:

http://www.nightskyatlas.com/skyatlas.jsp?declination=-40.0&viewAngle=120&viewRotation=180&width=850&height=150&b00=1&b03=1&b04=1&b05=1

Tonight from 40S latitudes