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The Scorpius constellation has at least 18 bright stars. There are many more too, of course.
No you would see an entirely different vista. Most of the stars you can see from earth would not be visible to the naked eye from the galactic core, and they would also be lost in a blaze of glory of the core suns. From within a planetary atmosphere you probably would not be able to see stars even at night, due to the ambient light. The core suns are packed about a quarter of a light year apart.
At least 18 bright stars and many more less bright.
Constellations are the patterns formed by stars in the sky at night. The least common constellation is the "Big Dipper."
Orion is a pattern or shape suggested by at least 8 major stars and several dimmer ones, each with its own unique apparent visual magnitude.
There are at least 1.14 billion galaxies in the Draco constellation (with billions of stars, planets, and moons in each one; as well as asteroids and nebulae). Their light has taken 13 billion years to reach Earth.
The constellation Orion contains at least 4 galaxies.M78 - NGC 2068M43 - De Mairan's NebulaM42 - Orion nebulaIC 434 - Horsehead Nebulaand many other open clusters.Note: These galaxies lie far, far beyond the group of stars delineating the perimeter of the Orion Constellation. By "contain" we just mean we can see these galaxies out the Orion window.
There are at least 20 billion lenticular galaxies in the universe.
There are at least 15 billion elliptical galaxies in the universe.
There are at least 5 billion irregular galaxies in the universe.
There at least 60 billion spiral galaxies in the universe because the spiral galaxies comprise of about 60 percent of all galaxies which are about 100 billion.
To say the least.
There are at least 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe, so there are at least 1.14 billion galaxies in each one of the 88 constellations in the sky.
Two.
I think the least common is elliptical or irregular..
Yes, because scientists have found hundreds and hundreds of galaxies already and scientists say that there are more galaxies out there that they haven't found!
No. Because it will be impossible for astronomers to make an atlas of at least 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe.