Hateruma Island Stargazing Tower — Japan's Southernmost Stargazing Experience with the Southern Cross
Overview
Hateruma Island is Japan's southernmost inhabited island (24°02' N), part of Taketomi, Yaeyama County, Okinawa. The name derives from "Hate-no-uruma" (the edge of the coral reef). The Stargazing Tower offers one of Japan's darkest skies. With only about 500 residents and no traffic lights, this quiet environment enables an ultimate stargazing experience.
Observation Environment
Hateruma boasts Japan's darkest skies. Surrounded entirely by ocean and about 60km from Ishigaki Island, artificial light is nearly absent. The Bortle scale rates Class 1—world-class darkness. At 24°02' N, the Southern Cross reaches its highest altitude visible from Japan. Observable December through June, with optimal conditions in May.
The Milky Way appears as a literal "river of light"—a broad band—with dark nebulae traceable by the naked eye. The panorama is unmatched.
Facilities and Observation Tower
The Stargazing Tower houses telescopes and a planetarium. However, operations vary; verify the latest status before visiting. Regardless, the island offers breathtaking stargazing anywhere. Nishi Beach (North Beach) is an excellent observation point with an open southern horizon.
Access
About 60–80 minutes by high-speed ferry from Ishigaki Port Terminal. However, the Hateruma route is weather-dependent, with frequent winter closures. While day trips are possible, islander accommodations are essentially required for nighttime stargazing.
Stargazing Tips
The island is mostly flat with low elevation, requiring no special travel for observation. Lodges are walkable from anywhere. However, street lighting is sparse; bring a red-light torch (red recommended for observer courtesy).
Sea winds blow constantly; wind chill is significant even on warm days. Pack a long-sleeved jacket. The island has no habu snakes, but Robber crabs exist; watch your feet.
Relaterte artikler
Bisei Astronomisk Observatorium i Japan — Japans første lyspollutasjon-forebyggelsesforordning beskytter stjernehimmelen
Bisei Astronomisk Observatorium i Japan — Japans første lyspollutasjon-forebyggelsesforordning beskytter stjernehimmelen
Bisei By i Okayama-prefekturen vedtok Japans første lyspollutasjonsforebyggelsesforordning. Bisei Astronomical Observatory med sin 101cm teleskop tilbyr ekte stjernehimmel beskyttet av denne historiske forordningen.
Biei-bakker i Japan — 360-graders stjernesky-panorama over Hokkaidos rullekuller
Biei-bakker i Japan — 360-graders stjernesky-panorama over Hokkaidos rullekuller
De vidtstrakte rullekullen i Biei By tilbyr en uobstruksjonen 360-graders stjernesky-panorama. Fire årstider av landskap og stjernesky samarbeider vakkert her.
Amagi høylandet — 1000m over Izu-halvøyen, se Stillehavets vannlinje og stjerneskylen
Amagi høylandet — 1000m over Izu-halvøyen, se Stillehavets vannlinje og stjerneskylen
Amagi høylandet i Izu-byen i Shizuoka-prefekturen på høyde omkring 1000m. En åpen stjernesky som strekker seg til vannlinjen av Stillehavet er attraktiv på fjellplatået.
Akiyoshidai — 360-graders stjerneprakt over Japans største karstplatå
Akiyoshidai — 360-graders stjerneprakt over Japans største karstplatå
Akiyoshidai i Yamaguchi-prefekturen er Japans største karstplatå. Den unike topografien med hvite kalksteinblokker og 360-graders stjernesky skaper en uvanlig observasjonsopplevelse.