spring
Because in the summer the constellation would be in the daytime sky.
because in summer it is hot and in winter its cold and in the night sky u see all the stars
Orion is behind the sun in the summer sky - which is why you can't see it. Orion is visible during winter nights, in the Northern Hemisphere.
The winter night sky is the opposite direction from the summer night sky. The constellations you see in winter are on the other side of the sun in summer, so you would only see them in summer during a total solar eclipse.
In any one place, every object has a longer shadow in winter than it has in summer. That fact is an important clue to the reasons for winter and summer.
In Alaska, as mid-winter approaches, the days get shorter and shorter. Depending on how far North you are (BIG state) by midwinter the sun does not rise. In summer, days get longer and longer until, mid-summer, the sun does not set. Alaska has beautiful blue skies in the summer- and while it may be dark in winter, there is often color in the sky- the Northern Lights put on quite a show in the sky.
In the summer, the sun is higher in the sky, casting shadows that are shorter. In the winter, the sun is lower in the sky, creating longer shadows. This difference in the angle of the sun's rays causes the length of shadows to vary between the seasons.
Because of the tilt of Earth's axis.
The Earth's axis tilt is responsible.
Orion is a winter constellation, which means it is positioned in the sky during the winter months in the northern hemisphere. In the summer, the Earth's orbit places us on the opposite side of the Sun from where Orion is visible, so it is not visible in the night sky during the summer months.
Because 1) it is a southern sky constellation and 2) it is in the daytime sky in Summer.
Mountain Sky Homes located on Prince William Sound are rentals that have two sets of rates one for winter and another for summer. The winter rates start at $115 and go up to $129. Summer rates run from $179 to $199.