Cassiopeia is a constellation and not a single star so to give a temperature would be inaccurate.
Cassiopeia A is a supernova remnant in the constellation Cassiopeia.It has no single point of luminosity, so no definitive magnitude can be attributed to it.
cassiopeia is blue and white
Cassiopeia is a constellation not a single star.
Cassiopeia absolute magnitude is 2.20 to 2.23
Cassiopeia was founded in 1775 so 2011-1775=so Cassiopeia is 764 years old =)
Cassiopeia is a constellation and not a single star so to give a temperature would be inaccurate.
Cassiopeia A is a supernova remnant in the constellation Cassiopeia.It has no single point of luminosity, so no definitive magnitude can be attributed to it.
In Michigan, Cassiopeia is a circumpolar constellation: it never sets below the horizon. So, the answer to your question is: "At night." Any night there are clear skies you should be able to see Cassiopeia.
There are more than five stars in Cassiopeia but the major ones are as follows from the left of the 'W' / 'M': Caph, Beta Cassiopeia Shedar, Alpha Cassiopeia Cih, Gamma Cassiopeia Ruchbah, Delta Cassiopeia Sagin, Epsilon Cassiopeia
cassiopeia is blue and white
Cassiopeia's scientific name is Cassiopeia A. It is the remnant of a supernova explosion located in the constellation Cassiopeia, and it is a strong source of radio waves.
Sam was and is all of the gods of Cassiopeia
no cassiopeia is its own constellation
Cassiopeia is a constellation not a single star.
Ethmia cassiopeia was created in 1927.
Moscow-Cassiopeia was created in 1973.