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con do fon chon mon son
The number of stars in Preseus is: "6". But you will get some debate on what stars are included, you said stars in Perseus, answer 6.
the consellation stars
You can't really say how far a constellation is. A constellation is just a group of stars, and even though the stars in a constellation look close together in the sky, in reality they might be very far from each other. Some of the stars could be relatively close to us, and some much farther away. Really, the only question you can answer is how far from earth is each individual star in Perseus is.
There are 6 stars in the constellation Libra.
con do fon chon mon son
The number of stars in Preseus is: "6". But you will get some debate on what stars are included, you said stars in Perseus, answer 6.
Perseus is a constellation containing many stars but they are at very different distances. A constellation is a collection of stars in roughly similar directions, nothing else.
Constellations such as Perseus have been known since antiquity. No one knows who first named Perseus, let along who first recognized that group of stars as a single constellation.
The Chameleon constellation does not have any named stars.
the consellation stars
You can't really say how far a constellation is. A constellation is just a group of stars, and even though the stars in a constellation look close together in the sky, in reality they might be very far from each other. Some of the stars could be relatively close to us, and some much farther away. Really, the only question you can answer is how far from earth is each individual star in Perseus is.
The main ones are: Mirfak, also known as Algenib. Algol. Atik. Menkib.
The constellation has a total of 281 stars in the area defined by the constellation boundary of which only 11 are main stars.
There are 6 stars in the constellation Libra.
Perseus is a constellation ... a collection of individual stars that appear to form a pattern in the sky because of their positions. The stars of a constellation have no connection or association with each other. Each one has its own individual color, temperature, size, and distance from our solar system.
Please bear in mind that a constellation (such as Perseus) is basically a direction in the sky. It really doesn't make much sense to talk about the distance from such a direction (which is a direction from our point of view), to some object. If you mean the asterism (the group of stars), the main stars of Perseus - or any other constellation - happen to be more or less in the same direction, but the distance from these stars to Earth vary quite a lot.