NGC1925 Position and Visibility Tonight
Where is NGC1925 right now?
NGC1925 Visibility on July 20
NGC1925 Rise and Set Timetable
| Time | Elevation | |
| NGC1925 is always below the horizon | - | |
| NGC1925 transit | 08:39 | -13° |
Moon Rise, 25.8% illuminated ![]() | 09:58 | -14° |
| Astrosession begin | 20:12 | -61° |
| Moon Set | 21:33 | -60° |
| Astrosession end | 02:15 | -36° |
Track NGC1925 Position Throughout the Night
← Mon, 20 July 2026 →
| Time | |
| Altitude | |
| Azimuth |
NGC1925 Image Gallery
DSS Blue
DSS Red
DSS Near-Infrared
DSS Composite image
The photos are taken from the Digitized Sky Survey 2 (DSS2), which was produced at the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) under NASA contract, using data from the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), the European Southern Observatory (ESO), and the National Geographic Society-Palomar Observatory Sky Survey (POSS II).
Special thanks to the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO), the Royal Observatory, Edinburgh, and the California Institute of Technology for their significant contributions.
Finder Chart for NGC1925
| Object name | NGC1925 |
| Field of view | |
| Limiting magnitude | |
| NGC1925 coordinates | 5.36221, -65.79361 |
| Center coordinates | 5.36221, -65.79361 |
NGC1925 Passage Through Night
Current position of NGC1925
| Time | 10:29 |
| Latitude | 37.3541 |
| Longitude | -121.955 |
| NGC1925 elevation | -15° |
| NGC1925 Azimuth | 191° |
Annual motion of NGC1925
| Date | Mon, 20 July 2026 |
| Twighlight start | 20:08 |
| Twighlight end | 02:09 |
| Twighlight duration | 6h 1m |
| Rise | NGC1925 is always down |
| Set | NGC1925 is always down |
| Elevation at transit | -13° |
| Transit time | 08:35 |
| Equatorial coordinates | RA: 05h 21m 43s", Dec: -65° 47' 36s |
| Magnitude | - |
| Constellation | Dorado |
The graph is structured with the vertical axis showing the hours of the day, ranging from 12 AM to 12 AM the next day, while the horizontal axis spans each day of the year.
The reddish shaded area indicates the periods when the NGC1925 is above the horizon, visible to observers. The white line marks the times when the celestial object reaches its highest point in the sky each day, known as the transit.
You can also view detailed visibility information in a dedicated table, including exact rise, transit, and set times for each date.
Astrometric & Physical Parameters of NGC1925
Coordinates & Visibility
| Right Ascension | 5.36221° |
| Declination | -65.79361° |
| Magnitude | |
| Constellation | Dorado |
| Elevation | -15.3° |
| Azimuth | 191.3° |
Data Credits
The nebulae information on this page is sourced from the OpenNGC project, developed by Matteo Verga. OpenNGC provides detailed data on the NGC catalog, which is a valuable resource for exploring deep-sky objects such as nebulae.
For more details or to contribute to OpenNGC, visit the official GitHub repository: OpenNGC on GitHub.
