The stars that can be seen are either in our Galaxy, the milky way or have a high magnitude, much more than the sun's
yes but we should have a sharped eye a common person people cant see this
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.
The Little Dipper contains the north star, so if you're in the northern hemisphere, it should be visible any time of year.
As of October 2015, Venus should be in the sky there - not just for PA, but for people located just about anywhere.
That will depend on the time of year. At this time of year, April, the constellations that are visible than at other times of the year. In the early evening you should still be able to see Sirius, the brightest of all stars in the night sky, as seen from earth. Other easily visible constellations at this time of year are Leo and Virgo. The planet Saturn can be seen close to Leo at present. Go to the website at the link below, and enter your location and it will tell you what you can see from where you are.
You should try to get along with your sister-in-law because she is either the sister of your spouse (whom you presumably love) or the wife of your brother (whom you presumably love).
A zero should be in the billions place
They should stay visible.
nope,there shoud'nt be anything visible at all.
Avoid gathering MILLIONS & BILLIONS in beach and at same time
No. If you are travelling due West, in the Northern Hemisphere, it should be visible to your right. If you are travelling due East, it should be visible to your left.
Presumably you used a mouse in asking the question, so you should be able to think about the answer.
Yes. It may be hard at first to see, but after focusing the lens they should be visible.
It should be TN 2017
There is one star in the solar system and millions to billions of stars in one galaxy and billions of galaxies in the universe. So i see no reason why they should disagree with you.
The masthead light should be visible in a 225 degree arc centered on dead ahead.
. . be visible.