SkyAlmanac

Stargazing

Stargazing in Iqaluit

Iqaluit has an estimated Bortle class of 3. See what that means for the stars and the Milky Way, plus whether tonight is worth going out.

3 Bortle
Sky classRural sky
Sky brightness (SQM)21.69–21.89
Naked-eye limit6.6–7.0
Stars visible≈ 3,500

Stargazing tonight in Iqaluit

6.4 /10

Good stargazing conditions

Based on light pollution and the Moon. Add cloud cover for tonight's outlook.

Astronomical dark from12:40 AM
Dark until12:40 AM
Moon tonightLast Quarter · 50%

The Milky Way from {city}

From Iqaluit's latitude the bright galactic core barely clears the horizon, so the Milky Way is faint even under a dark sky. The outer arms are still visible away from city lights.

Another city or date

Getting the best from the sky over Iqaluit

With an estimated Bortle 3 sky, Iqaluit shows its brightest stars, planets and the Moon well, but faint stars and deep-sky objects are lost to skyglow. Binoculars help a lot: they cut through light pollution better than the naked eye and reveal star clusters, the Moon's craters and the moons of Jupiter.

To see more, the single best move is distance. Even a short drive to darker surroundings transforms the view; check the moon phase too, since a bright Moon washes out the sky as effectively as city lights. New moon on a clear night, away from town, is when the Milky Way appears.

This rating estimates conditions at the centre of Iqaluit. Skies get darker quickly as you leave the built-up area, so treat it as a starting point, not the limit of what's nearby.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Bortle class of Iqaluit?

Iqaluit has an estimated Bortle class of 3 (Rural sky). This describes the light pollution at the city centre; darker skies are usually within a short drive.

Can you see the Milky Way from Iqaluit?

Yes — on a clear, moonless night the Milky Way is visible from Iqaluit, and it becomes far more striking a short drive from the city lights.

What is the best night for stargazing?

A clear night around the new moon, well away from artificial light. The Moon is the biggest natural source of skyglow, so the darkest, most star-filled skies come when it is below the horizon.

Darker skies near {city}