An azimuth
Azimuth
That's very possible. It simply means that in order to find it, you face southeast, and then look straight ahead and some angle above the horizon. Viewed from the north or south pole, every star in your sky will have an azimuth of 135 degrees once every day. (But first you'd have to decide on a reference direction to designate as zero azimuth, since 'southeast' doesn't exist at the poles.)
its East...
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Very close to south-southeast. Halfway between southeast and south is 157.5 degrees.
A BACK AZIMUTH IS A PROJECTION OF THE AZIMUTH FROM THE ORIGIN TO THE OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE AZIMUTH CIRCLE. i.e. THERE ARE 360 DEGREES IN AN AZIMUTH CIRCLE, THUS THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION IS 180 DEGREES.
348
Azimuth
An azimuth
Zero/360 degrees is North; 90 is East; 180 is South; 270 is West. {each is 90 degrees from the next} 225 is Southwest. 45 degrees or half way between south and west. 210 is South-southwest Is that close enough for you? ;-)
Azimuth
azimuth
In order to calculate Azimuth with google Earth one would need to figure the decimals of degree units that are used and find the direction of point A to B. Once the calculation has been made one can then decipher the amount of space between points A and B.
The angle between the direction your compass points and the direction you're facing is the 'magnetic azimuth'. The angle between the direction to the north pole and the direction you're facing is the 'true azimuth'. They are virtually never the same angle. The difference between them is the 'magnetic declination' or the 'compass declination' in the place where you are at in which.
Azimuth is a technical mapping term which is used to describe the direction of angle between north and south on a compass circle through which the circle line passes.
That's the star's "azimuth".