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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.)

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15y ago

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Q: Will a star have an azimuth of 135 degrees?
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