Want this question answered?
Whichever it is, it'll be the other one in 12 hours from now.
upside-down
if you do it at a different time and turn the planisphere, then look at the Big Dipper and it might be upside down. I know it cuz im learnin bout it, RIGHT NOW! lol
Upside down and larger.
It would appear reversed, but not upside down. If it does appear upside down, then either the plate is mounted in such a manner.
Your question doesn't make sense. To the right of what? The Big Dipper is part of the constellation Ursa Major. The widely recognized "Dipper" rotates around the northern star (polaris) throughout the year. In Feb the dipper is high in the sky and appears upside down (fluid would spill out of the 'dipper'). in the summer it is low in the sky and would hold liquid. In the fall it is to the right of polaris tilting up. In the spring it is to the left of polaris tilting down. Above assumes viewing from the norhtern hemisphere.
u rotated 180 degrees will be upside down and will look like an n. Sometimes answers changes when you say I in a question to be a u. If you are talking about capital I, it will look the same rotated 180 degrees. i will look like an exclamation mark upside down
Everything under a microscope is upside down and backwards
how do you mean? when Galileo was trying to build his telescope he realized that he needed a mirror to reflect the image of the moon so it wouldn't be upside-down when he looked through the eyepiece. If you mean in the sky, the relationship between the earth, sun, and the moon determines what part of the moon is lit. light from the sun is refracted (i may not be using the correct term there, but it's bent) and strikes the moon causing it to appear illuminated, sometimes is looks like a smiley and sometimes like the standard standing banana when it's in its crescent phase
In Catholicism the upside down cross is sometimes worn by those with a devotion to St. Peter the Apostle who was crucified upside down.
It's half dead. Full dead is upside down.
Because microscopes and telescopes are made up of mirrors.