No. The best place to see Orion from is on the equator ... that's where it spends the most hours
above the horizon.
Even there, on the 4th of July, Orion isn't completely risen until 6 AM, and it's completely set
by 6 PM. So July seems like a particularly poor time to try and see Orion.
THANKS alot...
I was having a lot of prob in this question.
There will be a total solar eclipse on July 11, 2010, visible from a few islands in the South Pacific, Easter Island and the southern tip of South America.
The temperature in Fort Worth, Texas on July 11 1953: High-94 F Low-73 F
There have been three or four partial eclipses in each decade, but the last TOTAL solar eclipse visible in Atlanta, GA was on June 24, 1778. The NEXT total solar eclipse visible in Atlanta will be on May 11, 2078.
Monthly 24-hr averages range from −5 °C (23 °F) in January to 11 °C (52 °F) in July for Hammerfest in Norway
11:30 AM EDT = 7:30 AM PST (Example: New York to southern Baja California in late March) 11:30 AM EDT = 8:30 AM PDT (Example: New York to California in July) 11:30 AM EST = 8:30 AM PST (Example: New York to California in January) 11:30 AM EST = 9:30 AM PDT (Example: Jamaica to California in July)
24th July at 11:00am.......
The Orion Songbook was created on 2008-11-06.
Orion Clemens died on 1897-12-11.
My due date is July 4th 2009 and we conceived October 11, 2008.
The solar eclipse of July 11, 2010 will not be visible in India at all.
Edwin Orion Brownell was born on 1964-11-30.
Orion - 2013 is rated/received certificates of: Sweden:11
Orion is visible during the early night during the winter. you look to the south and it should be there. by spring, it will be around the horizon(SSW-SW) at the same time(about 9-11 pm). in the summer, it's visible in the eastern sky just before sunrise. But you should see it again in Autumn, around NEN-E. All of this is from the perspective of North America.
Orion - Mika Nakashima song - was created on 2008-11-12.
Orion - Girl Next Door song - was created on 2009-11-25.
J Orion Liptak was born on September 11, 1985, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA.
Not at all. The eclipse will be visible only in the South Pacific Ocean, including Easter Island, and the southern tip of South America.