If M97 is in Ursa Major, then it's *only* visible in Ursa Major. That's what being in a constellation means.
If you think of the sky of a map of all the objects we can see, the constellations are areas of that map. If a galaxy is in one constellation, then that's the area of the map it's in. You can't see it in a different one. it can't be in two places at once.
Try a planetarium program to see...My astronomy homework is asking for what constellation objects/stars are most visible in...?
The way you phrased this question is a bit confusing; it seems that there is some crucial information missing here.....My astronomy homework is asking for what constellation objects/stars are most visible in...?the stars and moon and sun thats the answerMy astronomy homework is asking for what constellation objects/stars are most visible in...?
The question is kinda weird. Ursa Major, Orion, Cassiopeia, Scorpio, and Pleiades contain highly recognizable stars/galaxies. There are many more. Hope this helps.My astronomy homework is asking for what constellation objects/stars are most visible in...?well ,the constellations visible are- Ursa Minor, Ursa Major, Cepheus, Cassiopeia and Draco OR YOU CAN CHECK THE BELOW WEBSITE---http://homeboyastronomy.com/2007/11/17/astronomy-observation-tips-what-constellations-can-be-seen-in-different-times/My astronomy homework is asking for what constellation objects/stars are most visible in...?
guanotwozero answered your question perfectly but just to give you an example, it's pretty much like saying "If my house is in New York, what other state could I also see it in?"
The constellations are the borders that separate the sky in sections, much like the border lines between states on a map of the USA separate the states.
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