Asterism Atlas

Named star-patterns beyond the official constellation boundaries.

Boötes / Canes Venatici / Leo / Virgo

Great Diamond

Diamond of Virgo

common observer pattern · high confidence

Arcturus, Cor Caroli, Denebola, and Spica make a huge spring diamond spanning several constellations. It frames the Coma-Virgo galaxy region for binocular and telescope planning.

Central RA
13h 06m 35.3s
Central Dec
+15° 13′ 40″
Brightest member
V -0.04
Best months from 50°N
March–June evenings
Suggested instrument
naked-eye
Approx. span
49.9°
Cor Caroli / 12Alp2CVn (HR 4915) — V 2.90Denebola / 94Bet Leo (HR 4534) — V 2.14Spica / 67Alp Vir (HR 5056) — V 0.98Arcturus / 16Alp Boo (HR 5340) — V -0.04ArcturusSpicaDenebolaCor Carolibrighter → largerV 1 reference1V 3 reference3V 5 reference5
Boötes / Canes Venatici / Leo / Virgo contextschematic finder — bright-star context, not a constellation boundary mapNE

Finder context

This wider chart is deliberately schematic: it uses nearby bright-star context and boxes the asterism’s member-star footprint, but it does not draw official constellation boundaries or promise horizon/season precision.

Framing: Approximate member-star span: 49.9°; use at least 69.9° field for context.

Observing and imaging

Naked eye

Primary naked-eye pattern; suburban skies should show the main stars unless the description notes a low horizon or dark-sky need.

Binoculars

Binoculars are optional: use them to check colours, nearby doubles, or richer Milky Way background.

Small scope

A telescope is usually too narrow for the whole shape; use it after the pattern has guided you to a target.

Imaging

Very large: image as a multi-panel or ultra-wide seasonal sky composition rather than a single telephoto frame.

Observability from your latitude

Uses this asterism’s centroid RA/Dec: transit altitude, hours above 20°, and a month-scale evening window. Default is Edmonton-ish 50°N.

Naked-eye visibility by sky class

Approximate limiting magnitudes: Bortle 3 ≈ V 6.6, Bortle 5 ≈ V 5.6, Bortle 7 ≈ V 4.6. The shape is counted recognisable when at least 70% of defining stars clear the limit.

Bortle 3: 4/4 stars — fully visibleBortle 5: 4/4 stars — fully visibleBortle 7: 4/4 stars — fully visible

Member stars

NameBayer / FlamsteedHRRA J2000Dec J2000V mag
Arcturus16Alp BooHR 534014h 15m 39.7s+19° 10′ 57″-0.04
Spica67Alp VirHR 505613h 25m 11.6s−11° 09′ 41″0.98
Denebola94Bet LeoHR 453411h 49m 03.6s+14° 34′ 19″2.14
Cor Caroli12Alp2CVnHR 491512h 56m 01.7s+38° 19′ 06″2.90

Source and confidence

common observer pattern; high confidence. Widely used modern observing guide-pattern; provenance is practical observer usage rather than an official constellation figure.

Citations