Venus. and its actually a planets not a star. Sirius is the brightest star in the sky, but seasons depend if you can see it no matter which hemisphere you are located on.
I believe Vega is directly overhead, near zenith, and is also very bright in any location and season. IN the summer, and winter, Rigel in Orion is very bright, but overall go for Sirius. Chachi
In early September, 2010, the "bright star in the east" shortly after sunset is the planet Jupiter. This month, Jupiter and Earth have their closest opposition in years, and they won't be this close again until 2022. This month, Jupiter even outshines Venus!
The really bright one? Probably Jupiter, depending on your location. I live near Sacramento, CA, and Jupiter is in the southeast for me. If you're well south of me, then it might be more directly east for you.
These days (september 2010), Jupiter rises in the east, soon after sunset. Jupiter is the second-brightest star/planet, after Venus - which, right now, is also visible (in the west, after sunset).
On July 10,2010, the brightest object in the western sky, by far, is the planet Venus.
Venus
sirius
Jupiter
Jupiter
Yes and 7 pm is the evening
watering in the evening usually prevents the water evaporating, and early morning is to prevent it from frosting/freezing up...
Go with the height you measure in the day, afternoon/ Evening hieght is more accurate you lose your out of bed height quickly after waking up so your already at your low or close to it by afternoon anyway.I am 189cm Morning and 187cm Evening, I just say 6'2, in cm 187/188
They landed during the lunar morning. A full day/night on the moon lasts about 29 days on Earth, so the Lunar morning lasted nearly a week.
Burrowing Mayfly is produced in the morning, is handed down that it dies in the evening, and is short-lived.
In morning and evening
Evening Edition ended on 2009-03-01.
Venus is a planet, not a star. It is sometimes called the Morning star and the Evening star because it is often the first object in the night sky to be seen in the evening and the last to be seen in the morning. Whether you see it in the morning or the evening depends on where it is in its orbit.
8am is morning. AM is morning whilst PM is afternoon/evening.
I think the answer is "Mercury". That's because it appears in the sky as the "morning star" and also as the "evening star".
The sun travels from the East and sets in the West.
morning
in the morning.
From Earth Venus always appears close to the Sun, so can only be seen at two times of day. These are just before the Sun rises, when it is called the Morning Star, and just after the Sun sets, when it is called the Evening Star.
Venus is the evening star
Venus Looks like a star in the sky but is a planet which shines with light from the sun. Called both the Evening Star and the Morning Star but is not a star.
The duration of Lora from Morning Till Evening is 1.55 hours.