
Hold the phone up to the sky.
The map follows the phone — compass and attitude keep the chart aligned with what is overhead. An arrow guides you to whatever you are looking for.
A complete tool. Scientifically rigorous.
Starmap returns as the most complete reference we have ever built for the field observer. No advertising. No in-app purchases. No tracking. A contribution from a working astronomer to anyone who looks up.
From the dark-adapted field to the desk at home — the whole working set.

The map follows the phone — compass and attitude keep the chart aligned with what is overhead. An arrow guides you to whatever you are looking for.

2.5 million stars on the device. Red mode preserves your night vision. Centre the Telrad rings on the target and match the eyepiece field to the chart.

Printable, restrained, dense. Dark nebula traces, Bayer–Flamsteed labels inline, magnitude-graded dots — the printed-atlas vocabulary, native.

Twilight to the minute. Active regions with McIntosh and Mt. Wilson classifications. Plage regions, F10.7, Kp — straight from NOAA.

Define your telescope and eyepiece — here, Saturn and its moons inside a true field of view. Overlay the camera frame to pick a guide star before you ever shoot.

Spectrum, luminosity class, temperature, mass, radius, lifetime, fate. Metallicity, log gravity, variability, fourteen photometric bands. Presented cleanly, in the language of astronomy.
I am a professional astronomer. Eighteen years ago, when the App Store opened, I built Starmap. It found a generous audience — readers who held the sky in their hand for the first time. Then I stepped away, embracing other adventures.
Starmap is back. I built it alone, over several years. This time it is free. No advertising. No in-app purchases. No tracking. No premium tier. No upgrade prompts.
The most complete reference for the visual observer I have been able to make — in the line of Tirion’s Uranometria 2000.0 and Vehrenberg’s Handbook of the Constellations, the worn atlases that taught generations of us our way around the night sky.
No tier-locked catalogues. No upgrade nags. The whole monty, on first launch.
Starmap ships a printable-style day map for planning and study, in the same restrained vocabulary as the printed atlases that taught generations of astronomers. Dotted Milky Way contours. Bayer–Flamsteed labels inline. Magnitude-graded dots without halos. No constellation art unless you ask for it.
The point is the same as it was in 1981: the chart should disappear into the act of observing. Your attention belongs to the sky.

A tradition we kept from the first edition. Print, fold, take into the field. Distribute. Use them in your classroom, or on your pathfinder expeditions.
Charts for the current month, generated each click. Free for personal and educational use; please credit Starmap.
You are writing to a real person, so be as kind as if you would meet them in person. Bug reports, suggestions, observations from the field — all welcome.
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