There are many good ones to see. Orion and Leo are particularly good, as are some of the ones that you can see all year round, like Ursa Major. If you go to the site at the link below, and enter your location, it will tell you what you can see from where you are.
No, constellations are patterns of stars that we see from Earth. The moon is a celestial body that orbits Earth, so it does not have its own constellations.
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There's no answer to this question, because the definition of circumpolar depends on where you are. If you're at the pole, all the constellations you can see are circumpolar. If you're on the equator, there are no circumpolar constellations.
Yes we do, we all see the same star every night. But if you are in a certain spot you can see the constellations. Not all can see the constellations. If you can you are very lucky.
In Missouri, some prominent constellations that can be seen include Orion, Ursa Major (containing the Big Dipper), and Cassiopeia. These constellations are visible throughout the year and are easily recognizable in the night sky.
You can see lots of constellations in August. You can see constellations in every month of the year.
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Earth revolves around the sun. That is why the constellations we see from Earth appear to change.
You see different constellation because the constellations stay in place, but Earth moves so every season you are able to see different constellations.
in the night sky
No, constellations are patterns of stars that we see from Earth. The moon is a celestial body that orbits Earth, so it does not have its own constellations.
All the constellations that we see, and there are 88 of them, are all in our galaxy, the Milky Way.
Constellations are not real, they are merely patterns of stars we see from our point of view. All of the constellations we see are part of the Milky way Galaxy and so are 10 billion other stars we can't see with the naked eye.
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seasons
constellation seeing
If I go out and look at the same time of night, then almost all of the constellations I see in January are completely different from the ones I see in July. Even the ones that are the same, up there near the North Star, are tipped around in completely different positions. From this experience, I conclude that if you go out and look at the same time of night every time, then most of the constellations you can see, and the position of the ones up there near the North Star, are different in different seasons.