Yes it does; both places are located on the Northern Hemisphere.
No. The Zodiac are 12 constellations that lie in the plane of the ecliptic; circumpolar ("moving around the pole") stars are well above or below the ecliptic.
All stars appear to travel in circles around the celestial pole. The ones that areso close to the pole that they never set below the horizon are described as"circumpolar" stars. The size of that region of the sky as seen from your locationdepends on your latitude. At the north or south pole, the entire sky is included.At the equator, none of it is.
The region of the sky visible all year round is called "circumpolar". What stars and constellations are included there depends on your geographical location. For example, for somebody living 30 degrees south of the equator, a region around the south pole of the sky, with a radius of 30 degrees, would be circumpolar.
Ellen and her family, who are Jewish, go to Sweden at the end of Number the Stars.
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At the equator, you will see no circumpolar stars.
All stars are circumpolar
A circumpolar star never sets below your horizon.
Circumpolar motion refers to the motion of the stars relative to the viewer in a particular spot. Stars that are said to be circumpolar never cross the horizon as they cross the sky for the viewer.
If you were standing on the equator, how many circumpolar stars would you see?
They are always visible in the sky. (Unless it's cloudy). They don't "rise" and "set" at the latitudes where they are circumpolar.
No. The Zodiac are 12 constellations that lie in the plane of the ecliptic; circumpolar ("moving around the pole") stars are well above or below the ecliptic.
No they do not. By definition circumpolar stars do not "rise". They are above the observer's horizon at all times.
Polaris
Circumpolar stars/constellations always stay above our horizon, if they go below our horizon than they are no longer circumpolar.
For example, if you live at a latitude of 50° north, the circumpolar stars will be all stars that are up to 50° around the celestial north pole. As another example, if you live at a latitude 30° south of the equator, the circumpolar stars will be all those that are in a circle up to 30° around the celestial south pole.
At the North Pole, and at the South Pole.