The answer depends on where you now and where you will be six months from now.
Anyone who lives in the northern hemisphere.
Yes, you can see Polaris from China.
Polaris, also known as the North Star, is visible year-round in the Northern Hemisphere. However, the best time to observe it is during the winter months, particularly from November to March, when the nights are longer and skies are often clearer. During these months, Polaris is high in the sky, making it easier to locate.
Your at the equator if you see Polaris at the horizon
Your at the equator if you see Polaris at the horizon
Very much where I am now.
From the Earth's North Pole, you can see the northern stars, the northern lights (aurora borealis), and the sun moving in a circular path around the horizon during the summer months. The North Star, Polaris, is also visible at the center of this rotation.
Because in the future, due to a wobble in how the earth rotates on its axis, known as precession, what we now see as the north star, which we all Polaris, will no longer appear to be in that position.
Hello everyone, Polaris Is Not visible from Australia. :)
Polaris is not a white dwarf. If it was you wouldn't be able to see it. Polaris is in fact a multiple star system, that just looks like one star. The brightest star is a bright giant with a spectral type of F7 - so it will appear as a yellow-white star.
NO!