Auriga is the Latin for the constellation "Charioteer", primary star is Capella.
Vulpecula is a faint constellation in the northern hemisphere.It is located in the "middle" of Deneb, Altair and Vega.See related link for a star map.
The Tropic of Capricorn is in the southern hemisphere; the Tropic of Cancer is in the northern hemisphere. The way to remember is at the time of year when the sun is directly over the Tropic of Capricorn, the sun was in the constellation of Capricorn back when the tropics were named.
In the spring it is located in the southern hemisphere In the fall it is located in the morthern hemisphere
The northern hemisphere and the western hemisphere.
"Corona Borealis" is a constellation in the stars. -- Every point in the sky rotates above both the eastern and western hemispheres every day. -- Since Corona Borealis occupies the range of stellar declination between +25° and +40°, it's always directly over places in the northern hemisphere, and visible from all northern latitudes and roughly 70% of the southern ones.
The constellation named after the Latin word for "charioteer" is Auriga. It is visible in the northern hemisphere during winter and is represented in ancient mythology as a charioteer holding a goat and two kids.
No, the Phoenix constellation is actually in the southern hemisphere.
Hercules is a constellation located in the northern celestial hemisphere. It is visible to observers in the northern hemisphere and is best seen during the summer months.
In the Northern hemisphere, the constellation seen in the early winter months is Aries.
Northern
It is a summer constellation in the northern hemisphere.
Never. Crux is a Southern Hemisphere constellation.
the northern hemisphere
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The Aquarius constellation can be found in the Northern Hemisphere.
In the northern hemisphere
Cancer can be seen in the Northern & Southern Hemisphere between Leo and Gemini.