Here's a rough table:
October 1: . . 12:00 Noon
November 1: 10:00 AM
December 1: . 8:00 AM
January 1: . 6:00 AM
February 1:. 4:00 AM
March 1: . . . 2:00 AM
April 1: . . 12:00 Midnight
May 1: . . 10:00 PM
June 1:. . . 8:00 PM
July 1: . . . . . . 6:00 PM
August 1: . . . 4:00 PM
September 1: 2:00 PM
General approximate rule for stars:
Wherever you see a star at some time tonight, as the dates pass, it will be in the same place about 4 minutes earlier each night, 1 hour earlier after 2 weeks, 2 hours earlier after a month.
No the big dipper is IN Ursa Major and the little dipper is in Ursa Minor
Not all constellations are close to the Big Dipper. The Big Dipper is part of the Ursa Major constellation and many other constellations are spread across the night sky at various distances from the Big Dipper.
Polaris is located at the end of the handle of the Little Dipper, also known as Ursa Minor. The Big Dipper is part of Ursa Major and does not point directly to Polaris.
The big dipper are the seven brightest of the formal constellation Ursa Major.
No, the Big Dipper is a constellation.Constellation means stars together and from Earth they appear in the same part of the sky but from another place in the galaxy the might not.
Dubhe and Alioth are the brightest stars in the big dipper both with an apparent magnitude of 1.8.
You can see the Big Dipper every month of the year, IF you live in the Northern Hemisphere
Fantastic question - The Big Dipper circles around Polaris, The North Star throughout the night.
The little dipper is in our Milky Way Galaxy, actually not all that far from us. It is above the big dipper, so that it appears to be pouring into the big dipper. If you can see the north star, that is the tail (or end of the handle) of the little dipper. The middle stars of the little dipper are somewhat faint, but the two outside stars of the top and bottom of the little dipper pan are about as bright as the north star.
Dubhe appears yellow-orange in color, while Alioth appears bluish-white.
wilt the stilt, and the big dipper.
when was the big dipper named
The Dipper appears to rotate in a East to West direction around the celestial North Pole - which is a point that is very close to Polaris.
Ursa Mayjor and Big Bear is the big dipper and Ursa Minor Or Little Bare is the litttle Dipper
The Big Dipper does not change positions, Earth moves relative to the Big Dipper all the time.
The star under the Big Dipper is named Polaris, also known as the North Star. It is a prominent star in the sky that appears stationary in the sky as it lies directly above the Earth's North Pole.
A big dipper is an alternative name for a roller coaster.