Cygnus is not a constellation of the zodiac.
Cygnus is a constellation not quite circumpolar. It is visible from June to October. One of the best observing times for this constellation is in September at 9:00 PM.
No. The Zodiac are 12 constellations that lie in the plane of the ecliptic; circumpolar ("moving around the pole") stars are well above or below the ecliptic.
Circumpolar constellations are those that, from the viewer's latitude, never set. Any constellation found in the zodiac is not circumpolar. These are seasonal. Pisces appears in the Spring in the Southern hemisphere and in Autumn in the Northern hemisphere.
No. All circumpolar constellations are found near the celestial poles. Because of their proximity to the poles, they never disappear from view. Sagittarius is on the ecliptic and thus (like all other zodiac constellations) not close enough to the poles to render it circumpolar.
Because it is nowhere near the poles.Because it is nowhere near the poles.Because it is nowhere near the poles.Because it is nowhere near the poles.
Ursa Major is a circumpolar constellation, i.e. it never rises or sets in the northern hemisphere (and never seen in the southern hemisphere).The Zodiac constellations and signs go around the central band of the sky from tropic to tropic and crossing the equator.So Ursa Major isn't a Zodiac constellation.
No there are no circumpolar constellations on the equator.
There's no answer to this question, because the definition of circumpolar depends on where you are. If you're at the pole, all the constellations you can see are circumpolar. If you're on the equator, there are no circumpolar constellations.
Cygnus is a Swan.
A circumpolar current is a type of current that can be found in the Antarctic region. A circumpolar current moves in a clockwise rotation.
"Circumpolar" means it is always above the horizon.