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Only one: The constellation orion
It depends. If you are in the Northern Hemisphere, Orion should appear every night. It does NOT show up in the Southern Hemisphere.
Orion is a constellation, not a galaxy. The stars in it appear to form a pattern but they are not a unit and they are all completely different distances away. So there is no definitive distance that you can say Orion is away from us. You can only talk about the distance of individual stars that are in it.
It would appear in the southwest, setting early in the evening, so it is not a good time of the year to see it. December or January are far better.
The Kuiper belt is a ring-shaped region of ice objects that orbit the sun beyond the orbit of Neptune. It is home the the dwarf planets Pluto, Haumea, and Makemake and is the origin of most comets. Orion's belt is a set of three stars that appear to form the belt of the constellation Orion.
Only one: The constellation orion
Not surprisingly - Orion!!
It depends. If you are in the Northern Hemisphere, Orion should appear every night. It does NOT show up in the Southern Hemisphere.
Orion, the big dipper ( Ursa major ), the little dipper ( Ursa minor ) hydra ( the water snake ), Gemini ( the twins ), telescopium ( the telescope ), and here's a funny constellation, Puppis ( the poop )
Apollo gets angry that Orion is hunting with his sister Artemis and later tricks her into killing Orion. Orion is then hung in the stars.
No. The three stars in orion's belt aren't even connected. They just happen to appear close together and in a line, from where we are.
Orion is a constellation, not a galaxy. The stars in it appear to form a pattern but they are not a unit and they are all completely different distances away. So there is no definitive distance that you can say Orion is away from us. You can only talk about the distance of individual stars that are in it.
the position of the Earth at different times of the year. Sometimes when it is night, you can see Orion. This is because the night side of the Earth is pointing at Orion. On the other side of the sun, the night side is facing in the opposite direction. Away from Orion. Therefore you can't see it. This is characteristic of all locations on Earth but on the other side of the Earth, you would see it in the summer instead.
It would appear in the southwest, setting early in the evening, so it is not a good time of the year to see it. December or January are far better.
Rigel is in the constellation of Orion the hunter, it is visible from Earth during the period of Northern Winter - at night.
The Kuiper belt is a ring-shaped region of ice objects that orbit the sun beyond the orbit of Neptune. It is home the the dwarf planets Pluto, Haumea, and Makemake and is the origin of most comets. Orion's belt is a set of three stars that appear to form the belt of the constellation Orion.
He appears to be in many stories such as the Trojan War, when Apollo tricked Artemis into killing her spouse Orion, and many more.