The brightest stars in Pegasus are:-
Assuming that you mean, the stars that look brightest to us: Those are:* The Sun (which changes constellations about once every month).
* Sirius, constellation Canis Maioris.
* Canopus, constellation Carina.
So, if you exclude the Sun, the answer would be Canis Maioris, and Carina.
Please note that some planets are brighter than Sirius - and those planets look like stars. They are NOT stars, according to the modern definition; and they, too, change from one constellation to another several times a year.
Canis Major has the brightest star, Sirius.
Carina has the second brightest star, Canopus.
709 stars all together
Pegasus is not a single star but a constellation comprising a 88 stars in the Bayer/Flamsteed catalogues. This range, in brightness from Enif or epsilon pegasi with an absolute magnitude of -4.51 to WASP at 7.9
Of the stars you can see from Earth, 90% are in the main sequence.
The main fuel for stars is hydrogen.
main sequence stars , our sun is also a main sequence star
See related link.
1, there is only 1 MAIN star.
There are hundreds of stars in the constellation Pegasus.The main stars are:MarkabScheatAlgenibEnifHomamMatarBahamSadalbariFor details about all the other stars, see related link.
Vulpecula has 5 main stars in its system. it is bordered by the constellations Lyra, Hercules, Delphinus, Cygnus and Pegasus.
The stars
Pegasus
Blue
The named stars that make up the constellation Pegasus are Markab, Scheat, Algenib, Enif, Homam, Matar, Baham, and Sadalbari
14 stars in pegasus. But I think it 15(because I counted it, I might count wrong).
the best time to see pegasus is at night because its dark and the stars are out.
709 stars all together
The Pegasus Constellation has several primary stars. They are Markib, Alpha Andromedae, Alpha Pegasi, Beta Pegasi, and Algenib. Alpha Pegasi is the brightest star in the grouping.