Want this question answered?
Ursa Minor (also known as the Little Bear) is visible year-round in the Northern Hemisphere. It cannot be seen from the Southern Hemisphere. Within this constellation is an asterism called the Little Dipper. The last star in the handle of the Little Dipper is the North Star, officially called Polaris. If you can see the North Star, you can see the Little Dipper and you are looking at Ursa Minor.
Ursa Minor is known as the Little Bear.
"The Big Dipper" is a traditional asterism of seven prominent stars within the constellation of Ursa Major.
Big dipper.
Polaris is the star which lies within a degree of the celestial north pole, so you are facing north. It is a widely believed but incorrect idea that Polaris is very bright; it is not, but it is bright enough for you to see it on a moonless night. It is found at the end of the 'tail' of Ursa Minor, or the Little Dipper, and the Big Dipper points to it.
Ursa Minor (also known as the Little Bear) is visible year-round in the Northern Hemisphere. It cannot be seen from the Southern Hemisphere. Within this constellation is an asterism called the Little Dipper. The last star in the handle of the Little Dipper is the North Star, officially called Polaris. If you can see the North Star, you can see the Little Dipper and you are looking at Ursa Minor.
Ursa Minor is known as the Little Bear.
Yes. All the stars you see at night are in the Milky Way galaxy.
"The Big Dipper" is a traditional asterism of seven prominent stars within the constellation of Ursa Major.
Big dipper.
Polaris is the star which lies within a degree of the celestial north pole, so you are facing north. It is a widely believed but incorrect idea that Polaris is very bright; it is not, but it is bright enough for you to see it on a moonless night. It is found at the end of the 'tail' of Ursa Minor, or the Little Dipper, and the Big Dipper points to it.
During which stage in team formation does 'agreement and consensus' begin forming within the team?
One constellation holds the Big Dipper, and that constellation is Ursa Major. The Big Dipper is located at the end of the body and the tail of the Great Bear constellation. The Big Dipper is considered a minor asterism within the constellation of Ursa Major, and the stars that make up the Big Dipper are Alkaid (at the end of the handle), Mizar, Alioth, and Megrez (making up the rest of the handle), and Megrez (same star), Dubhe, Merak, and Phecda making up the "dipper" part of the constellation.
the fireheart series (very good series but a little sad) starts with the fire within, icefire, fire star, and the fire eternal They also have Drak Fire! it goes Fire Within, Icefire, Fire Star, The Fire Enternal and Drak Fire.
Those of the minerals forming the rock.
Ursa Major or the Big Bear is the third largest of the 88 constellations. Seven stars form a familiar group of stars, or an "asterism" within the constellation. In America they are called the "Big Dipper" or "Drinking Gourd," and in Britain the "Plough" or the "Wain." The Big Dipper is one of the most easily recognizable groups of stars in the sky. It is referred to as circumpolar because it never completely sets below the horizon, but is visible in northern skies year-round. Three stars make up the Big Dipper's handle, and four stars make its bowl. If you can find the Big Dipper in the sky, you have a skymark to orient yourself both on the Earth and in the Heavens. The two stars that form the pouring side of the bowl point to Polaris, the north star. Polaris is a rather faint star about five times farther away than the distance between the pointers themselves, and marks the tip of the handle of the Little Dipper. The Big and Little Dippers pour into each other, just as the Big Bear and the Little Bear ceaselessly turn around and around the northern sky. The Guard stars of the Little Dipper protect Polaris from the Great Bear, just in case he might try to catch the North Star for himself.
The ruby dragon is in the entrance to the attic in the treasure box