The south pole.
If you were standing at the Earth's South Pole, you would see stars near the South Celestial Pole, such as Sigma Octantis, which is the closest star to the pole and remains nearly fixed in the sky. Most stars would appear to move in a circular path around the pole, rising and setting horizontally at the horizon. Constellations like the Southern Cross (Crux) and Centaurus would be visible, while stars in the northern hemisphere, like Polaris, would not be visible at all.
Alpha Centauri, also known as Rigil Kentaurus or Toliman, resides in the constellation of Centaurus, the centaur. It is quite far south in the sky and is only visible in the southern hemisphere. It is a circumpolar star of the south pole and reaches its highest point in the sky in June.
An observer would not see Polaris, also known as the North Star, in the night sky at any time during the year if they are located south of the equator. This is because Polaris is positioned nearly directly above the North Pole, making it visible only in the Northern Hemisphere. As one travels further south, Polaris gradually sinks lower in the sky until it is no longer visible. Countries such as Brazil, Australia, and South Africa are examples where Polaris cannot be observed.
Because it does
As you approach 0 degrees latitude (the equator), the North Star becomes lower in the sky. The North Star is located directly above the North Pole, so as you move further south towards the equator, it appears closer to the northern horizon. At the equator (0 degrees latitude), the North Star would be right on the horizon and not visible.
The sky is over the entire earth. it is the same distance from the north pole as it is the south.
Anywhere, except right at the equator. For example: Somebody who lives 10 degrees south of the equator will see a region with a radius of 10 degrees, around the south pole of the sky, as circumpolar.
The southern circumpolar constellation that contains the stellar south pole is Crux, also known as the Southern Cross. It is a prominent asterism in the southern hemisphere sky and is easily recognizable by its distinctive shape of four bright stars. Due to its proximity to the celestial south pole, Crux remains visible all year round in the southern sky.
If you were standing at the Earth's South Pole, you would see stars near the South Celestial Pole, such as Sigma Octantis, which is the closest star to the pole and remains nearly fixed in the sky. Most stars would appear to move in a circular path around the pole, rising and setting horizontally at the horizon. Constellations like the Southern Cross (Crux) and Centaurus would be visible, while stars in the northern hemisphere, like Polaris, would not be visible at all.
From March 21 to September 21, the sun never sets at the north pole and never rises at the south pole.The south pole is sunless and the north pole sees the sun in the sky, though it is by no means "high".From September 21 to March 21, the sun never rises at the north pole and never sets at the south pole.The north pole is sunless and the south pole sees the sun in the sky, though it is by no means "high".
Circumpolar constellations are always visible in the night sky from a specific location, such as the South Pole, as they never set below the horizon. At the South Pole, all circumpolar constellations can be seen at some point during the year, as they revolve around the celestial point directly above the Earth's axis.
At the appropriate date and time, the entire constellation of Leo is visible to anyone situated anywhere north of about 49° south latitude. That's the line roughly through the south end of New Zealand and almost the south end of South America ... anywhere between there and the north pole.
At the North or South Pole, due to the extreme tilt of the Earth's axis. This means that only half of the sky is visible at any given time, with the other half remaining below the horizon.
because she is a jumper in sky from north pole to south pole.................
Alpha Centauri, also known as Rigil Kentaurus or Toliman, resides in the constellation of Centaurus, the centaur. It is quite far south in the sky and is only visible in the southern hemisphere. It is a circumpolar star of the south pole and reaches its highest point in the sky in June.
There is no particularly bright star near the sky's south pole. One star that might qualify is Sigma Octans, but that's only a 5.6 magnitude star - in other words, barely visible with the naked eye.
The north celestial pole is not visible from any point on Earth's surface south of the equator. This is always true. The north celestial pole is the point in the sky directly above the Earth's north pole. Even though the north celestial poles moves about in the sky, it remains invisible everywhere in the southern hemisphere. The north celestial pole moves around in a circle in the sky as the Earth's axis wobbles. Each wobble takes about 23 thousand years.