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The star was seen in the eastern part of the sky, and will be the direction from which Christ will come for the last time.
NNW
358/7 = 51.142857
358 is rounded to the nearest ones.
358 = 3.58 × 102
358 degrees kelvin
GD 358 is a variable white dwarf star of the DBV type
It seems that "Dhruv" or "Dhruva" is identified with the pole star - probably Polaris. That one is to the north, at a altitude, above the horizon, approximate equal to your latitude. (If you live 50 degrees north, it should be 50 degrees above the horizon.)
225 degrees means wind direction is South/West indicating the direction from which the wind is coming. Like 0 or 360 degrees means North direction.
according to my knowledge dru star appears in north direction
270 degrees is West.
The star you're looking for to tell direction is Polaris, the North Star. If you know what time it is, and have an accurate star map, you could use Betelgeuse to tell direction, but it's difficult.
On a compass, the direction with a bearing of 450 degrees is located in the northwest region. The standard compass measures the direction in degrees, starting from North at 0 degrees and proceeding clockwise until 360 degrees. Hence, a bearing of 450 degrees is just beyond the West direction, which is marked at 270 degrees, and points towards the northwest. ββ£β£ββ’β―Β Β β―:ββ―Β Β β―/ββ―Β Β β―/ββ¦β¦β¦β―Β Β β―.ββββββ’β£ββ‘ββ‘β£β―Β Β β―.βββββ―Β Β β―/ββ‘ββββ‘β―Β Β β―/ββ’β‘β€β₯β€β§β―Β Β β―/ββββββ₯ββββββ―Β Β β―/β
45 degrees is NE
The star was seen in the eastern part of the sky, and will be the direction from which Christ will come for the last time.
The early travelers used the stars not to get lost. They took the direction of star and if moving in same direction, the star would remain in the same direction.
Roughly 115 degrees in one direction, 245 degrees in the other direction.