The constellation Gemini has different stars, with different brightnesses.
The constellation Gemini has different stars, with different brightnesses.
The constellation Gemini has different stars, with different brightnesses.
The constellation Gemini has different stars, with different brightnesses.
The constellation Gemini has different stars, with different brightnesses.
Gemini is a constellation, a pattern of stars in the sky. Most of the stars in Gemini are larger and brighter than the Sun, which is only of medium size and brightness.
Gemini is made up of many, many stars - each one having it's own relative distance form Earth. It only looks like Gemini from our perspective... in another solar system, you wouldn't recognize it.
Gemini
There are 8 main stars with an additional 9 stars in the asterism. There are over 80 stars in the Gemini constellation [See related link]
Gemini is a constellation, not a single star. The constellation contains 80 stars which appear in the Bayer/Flamsteed catalogues.
The constellation Gemini looks like two lines of stars in the winter sky. At the top of each line is a bright star - Castor and Pollux - representing the heads of the celestial twins. The constellation is located in between Taurus and Cancer. Gemini can be see all winter long.
Gemini is a constellation and different stars in Gemini are different distances, so there's no fixed time. Unless you're using another meaning of Gemini?
LynxAurigaTaurusOrionMonocerosCanis MinorCancer
Castor and Pollux are the two main stars!
Gemini, the Twins. Castor and Pollux were the twins that give the constellation its name.
Taurus and Cancer are the obvious two. Others are Auriga, Canis Minor, Lynx, Monoceros, and Orion.
The beta star of Gemini is Pollux. The two bright stars of Gemini are Castor and Pollux. Although Pollux is the brightest star in Gemini, Castor was named alpha-Gemini (despite being second brightest), therefore, Pollux is beta-Gemini. Pollux is the one more southerly and easterly.