The radius of Polaris in inches is: 27,400,032,000 inches.
The north star is about 2,550,000,000,000,000 miles from PlutoIn inches, that's about 161,568,000,000,000,000,000 inches
212 inches
Vega will be the north star in about 12,000 years time.
The "North Celestial Pole" of the sky is always due north of you, and at the same angle above your horizon as whatever your north latitude is. It doesn't move, and the north star is always within about 1/3 of a degree from that point. Your longitude makes no difference at all. And neither does the time of day. And feet and inches have no place in angle measure. And latitude is north or south and longitude is east or west.
The North Star does not orbit the sun, nor do any of the stars. The North Star is its own star system several times more massive than the sun.
About 1700 years.
No planet is called the North Star. The North Star is actually Polaris, which is a star located close to the north celestial pole. It appears stationary in the night sky, and has been used for navigation by many civilizations throughout history.
The star "Polaris" is the North Star.
Polaris (North Star) is about 433 light years from us, so that is how long light will take to reach us.
Yes, many, many millions.
It depends on the star
The North Star is a star that where ever you are, when you look at it, that is north. It helped explorers to know which way is north;)