If you live north of roughly 34° north latitude, then Cassiopeia is always in the sky, 24/7.
It never sets below your horizon, and is visible at any time on any clear night. (34° north
is roughly the line through Los Angeles, Lubbock TX, Atlanta, Rabat Morocco, Beirut Lebanon,
Baghdad, Kabul, and Xi'an China.)
If your favorite stargazing hour is 10 PM, then Cassiopeia is highest in the sky around the beginning of December.
If you prefer 4 AM, then Cassiopeia is highest in the sky at that hour around the beginning of August.
Most likely the north pole, as it would be almost directly overhead, but the northern lights might get in your way....
During mid-late summer and early-mid winter. If you went outside tonight you could see it around 8:00pm looking upwards to the north-east.
Cassiopeia is a constellation named after a Greek goddess. It can be seen in the northern sky and appears high at nightfall as seen from latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere.
In the northern hemisphere in winter, look north after sunset for a giant "M" in the sky. In summer, it will be a "W", and low to the ground.
Cassiopeia is best seen during the month of November. (Winter)
The constellation Cassiopeia is circumpolar in the northern hemisphere. It is visible at least occasionally from any location north of latitude 10 degrees south.
in the northern sky
somebody put her up there
Always
3.33
Orion is a constellation that can be seen in the fall from Australia. Another constellation that can be seen from Australia is The Southern Cross.
Transparent
It's a mixture ... highly variable as seen by all the varieties seen in stores.
a beam of light can be seen if it passes through reflective material.
Cassiopeia can be seen from December to January in the United States. It look like a sideways W
in november
Cassiopeia can be seen from 90 degrees north to 20 degrees south latitude and regardless of longitude.
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It is both, as Cassiopeia is one of the constellations that can be seen all year round.
Cassiopeia is circumpolar, which means it can be seen all year round anywhere in the northern hemisphere.
it's a year-round constellation.. but it's best seen in fall! ^^
In the northern hemisphere, it can be seen at any time of year, as it is a circumpolar constellation.
2 constellations with 5 stars are Cassiopeia & Cepheus.
There are more than five stars in Cassiopeia but the major ones are as follows from the left of the 'W' / 'M': Caph, Beta Cassiopeia Shedar, Alpha Cassiopeia Cih, Gamma Cassiopeia Ruchbah, Delta Cassiopeia Sagin, Epsilon Cassiopeia
cassiopeia is blue and white
Cassiopeia's scientific name is Cassiopeia A. It is the remnant of a supernova explosion located in the constellation Cassiopeia, and it is a strong source of radio waves.