Cassiopeia.
Yes. The pole star/ north star/ Polaris is in the constellation Ursa Minor.
Polaris, aka the pole star or the north star, is in the constellation of Ursa Minor.
The north star is part of the constellation Ursa Minor, and is near such constellations as Ursa Major, Cassiopeia, and Draco.
There are several constellations near Polaris, the North Star. But, the closest one is the constellation in which the North Star is in - Ursa Minor, The Little Bear. The North Star, Polaris, is the last star in the Little Bear's tail.
Ursa Minor - the north star, Polaris, is part of it.
the constellation 'Ursa major' is used to identify the pole star
Yes. The pole star/ north star/ Polaris is in the constellation Ursa Minor.
Polaris, aka the pole star or the north star, is in the constellation of Ursa Minor.
The constellation is Ursa Minor (the Little Bear).
Ursa minor constellation
The Polestar is in Ursa Minor, or the Little Dipper. The Big Dipper and Ursa Minor and Cassiopeia are all near the Pole Star.
Polaris is NOT a constellation - it is a star. It's the North Star, meaning, it is directly above Earth's North Pole.
The north star is part of the constellation Ursa Minor, and is near such constellations as Ursa Major, Cassiopeia, and Draco.
The constellation points to the pole star (Polaris).
All the constellations appear to rotate round the pole star because the pole star is in line with the axis that the Earth rotates around with us on board.
The constellation that is shaped like a scorpion is Scorpius. Which is where we get the star-sign Scorpio.
There are several constellations near Polaris, the North Star. But, the closest one is the constellation in which the North Star is in - Ursa Minor, The Little Bear. The North Star, Polaris, is the last star in the Little Bear's tail.