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I would like to check in which constellation the Sun was in at some time in the past, any recommendations how to do that?

user7549
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There are plenty of online planetarium sites which should be able to do this for you. This one is the first hit for a Google search for "online planetarium software"

Conrad Turner
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  • thank you this one's great except i cant see the sun because it hasn't rise at the time, do you perhaps know of some online website that shows the whole celestial sphere from inside? thanks again... – user7549 Jun 26 '15 at 09:13
  • @user7549 You could keep the time but flip your location to the daylight side of the world, the Sun will still be in the same place against the fixed stars. Or use one that will allow you to look below the horizon (the one I have on my android tablet allows that). – Conrad Turner Jun 26 '15 at 09:18
  • i think i cant see the land below horizon..anyway i will use the software stelarium. thanks. regards. – user7549 Jun 26 '15 at 09:49
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    In Stellarium, you can disable the land (and the horizon,...) and can e. g. enable constellation lines with the buttons on the lower left. – hiergiltdiestfu Jun 28 '15 at 09:53
  • Are you endorsing the neave planetarium? I can't find anything about the source of it's data. The earth's precession affects the sun's position in the zodiac and who knows what neave is using. Stellarium is a fairly well vetted off-line program. For on-line sites, in-the-sky.org is quite handy, and is based on the JPL DE405 ephemeris - for years between about 1600 and 2200AD. – uhoh May 02 '16 at 13:57
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    @uhoh No, I'm just reporting it as the first hit, there are more than you can shake a stick at. – Conrad Turner May 02 '16 at 15:50
  • I see what you mean! But maybe not as many as this guy can. – uhoh May 02 '16 at 15:53
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blamblambunny
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In this case, Wolfram|Alpha has you covered. For example, look at the result for "which constellation was the Sun in Jan 1 1400". That said, I'm not sure this calculate includes the precession of the Earth's rotation axis, since I would've expected it to get my astrological birth sign right in 500 BC.

Warrick
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