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Mars is visible from Earth about 10 months out of every year.
Saturn will become easily visible early in 2009 for several months.
It depends on your location
It is visible throughout the winter months of the northern hemisphere.
In the southern circumsphere durin the summer months.
No.
It is visible throughout the winter months. So once you get to the late autumn, you begin to see it rising in the east.
At the end of the first Trimester (after 3 months)
Lots of constellations are visible during the winter months. About half of the constellations are above the horizon, and therefore usually visible, at any given moment. What constellations are visible would also depend on whether you live north or south of the equator (this affects the definition of "winter"), on the specific month, and the time of night.
Black and white striped.
No. For the Sun to be "in" one of the constellations means that the constellation is BEHIND the Sun, and so invisible. Any constellation is, on average, visible for 9 months of the year, with the 3 months of non-visibility being centered on that constellation.
No. For the Sun to be "in" one of the constellations means that the constellation is BEHIND the Sun, and so invisible. Any constellation is, on average, visible for 9 months of the year, with the 3 months of non-visibility being centered on that constellation.