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It is because of the rotation and revolution of the Earth's axis.The Earth goes to one side of its orbit this causes the other constellations to be blocked by the sun. The change in location makes other constellations out of sight. The Earth goes away from these constellations that's why we can't see them.

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What constellations are seen in the north hemisphere?

Some popular constellations visible in the northern hemisphere include Ursa Major (with the Big Dipper), Cassiopeia, Draco, and Cygnus (with the Northern Cross). These constellations are prominent in the night sky and can be easily spotted throughout the year in the northern hemisphere.


Do the southern hemisphere and in the northern hemisphere have the same constellations?

No, the southern hemisphere has different constellations than the northern hemisphere due to the Earth's tilt and rotation. Some constellations visible in the north may not be visible in the south, and vice versa.


What constellations are visible all year long?

Some of the constellations visible all year long from the northern hemisphere include Ursa Major (containing the Big Dipper), Ursa Minor (containing the Little Dipper with Polaris, the North Star), and Cassiopeia. In the southern hemisphere, constellations like Centaurus and Crux (Southern Cross) remain visible throughout the year.


What constellations would you see in the northern hemisphere?

In the northern hemisphere, you would be able to see constellations such as Ursa Major, Ursa Minor, Cassiopeia, Draco, and Orion. These constellations are visible at different times of the year and are easily recognizable in the northern sky.


Which direction do you look to find the circumpolar constellations?

To find circumpolar constellations, look towards the north if you are in the Northern Hemisphere or towards the south if you are in the Southern Hemisphere. Circumpolar constellations are visible all year round and appear to "circle" around the celestial poles without setting below the horizon.

Related Questions

What constellations are seen in the north hemisphere?

Some popular constellations visible in the northern hemisphere include Ursa Major (with the Big Dipper), Cassiopeia, Draco, and Cygnus (with the Northern Cross). These constellations are prominent in the night sky and can be easily spotted throughout the year in the northern hemisphere.


Do the southern hemisphere and in the northern hemisphere have the same constellations?

No, the southern hemisphere has different constellations than the northern hemisphere due to the Earth's tilt and rotation. Some constellations visible in the north may not be visible in the south, and vice versa.


Why would constellations near polaris be seen all year round by people in the northern hemisphere?

Also known as the North Star, Polaris, is located within one degree of the north celestial pole - the point of Earth's axis of rotation. This means that the Earth's (geographic) north pole is pointing almost exactly to the point in the sky where Polaris is located. For this reason, Polaris can be seen by anyone in the northern hemisphere throughout the year.


What constellations are visible all year long?

Some of the constellations visible all year long from the northern hemisphere include Ursa Major (containing the Big Dipper), Ursa Minor (containing the Little Dipper with Polaris, the North Star), and Cassiopeia. In the southern hemisphere, constellations like Centaurus and Crux (Southern Cross) remain visible throughout the year.


What constellations would you see in the northern hemisphere?

In the northern hemisphere, you would be able to see constellations such as Ursa Major, Ursa Minor, Cassiopeia, Draco, and Orion. These constellations are visible at different times of the year and are easily recognizable in the northern sky.


Which direction do you look to find the circumpolar constellations?

To find circumpolar constellations, look towards the north if you are in the Northern Hemisphere or towards the south if you are in the Southern Hemisphere. Circumpolar constellations are visible all year round and appear to "circle" around the celestial poles without setting below the horizon.


Can same star constellations be seen from Europe and Australia?

Some of them, yes. Constellations along the Zodiac can be seen from either hemisphere, but constellations well away from the celesial equator cannot be seen very far in the other hemisphere. For example, Ursa Major is not visible in Australia, and the Southern Cross is not visible in Europe or North America. Most of the "official" constellations were named by northern hemisphere astronomers, or European navigators sailing in southern waters. Look at how many southern hemisphere constellations have a nautical theme; the Telescope, the Octant, the Quadrant. Even Cetus, the Whale, was named by sailors, not people who LIVED there.


What are polar constellations?

They are the constellations at the celestial north & south poles - Ursa Minor (the little bear) is at the celestial North Pole and the Southern Cross is a constellation near the celestial South Pole.


Why aren't all constellations visible all year?

Circumpolar constellations are visible all year long, depending on where you are viewing them from. At the north pole, or the south pole, some constellations are visible year-round, these are the circumpolar constellations. On the equator, there are no circumpolar constellations because of the earths rotation, that is why circumpolar constellations are at the "poles". Some of the circumpolar constellations can also be viewed from other parts of the same hemisphere, such as the big dipper and the little dipper, although they are circumpolar, they are also seen in other parts of the northern hemisphere. Circumpolar constellations in the northern hemisphere, will never be seen at the south pole, and vice versa. I hope this helped.


What five constellations can you see all year in north America?

Ursa Major, the Big Bear (includes the Big Dipper)Ursa Minor, the Little BearCassiopeia, the Queen of EthiopiaCepheus, the King of EthiopiaDraco the Dragon


What constellations did the European explorers use to navigate?

Their primary navigation aid would have been the North Star. As accurate time pieces had not yet been created, they had no way of determining their longitude and the stars did little to assist them.


Which constellations are not visible from North America?

The Southern Cross and the Crux constellation are not visible from North America because they are located in the southern hemisphere. Another constellation that may not be visible from North America is the Eridanus constellation, which is best viewed from the southern hemisphere.