Impossible to say because Draco is a constellation, which means it consists of all the stars and other objects in a defined area of the sky. The distances could vary from the closest to extremely far away.
The average distance would depend closely on the dimmest objects included in the calculation.
Draco bought a condominium in Portland and has been living there ever since '87
Draco is a constellation - a direction in space, basically. You can indicate a distance to an individual star, but a distance to a constellation doesn't make sense.
About 580,000 light years away or less???
A distance of one million parsecs (approximately 3,262,000 light-years) is commonly denoted by the megaparsec(Mpc).
Parsec is a unit of distance, arcseconds of angle, so in principle, the two can't be converted. However, if an object has a parallax of 5 milliarcseconds (0.005 arc-seconds), the distance in parsecs, from Earth, would be 1 / 0.005 = 200 parsecs.
10 parsecs . . . 32.6 light-years
That means that by definition, the star is at the standard distance of 10 parsecs.That means that by definition, the star is at the standard distance of 10 parsecs.That means that by definition, the star is at the standard distance of 10 parsecs.That means that by definition, the star is at the standard distance of 10 parsecs.
Meters can be used; however, in practice, such distance are usually measured in parsecs, or (in popular astronomical literature) in light-years.
the sun's distance in parsecs in three-hundred billion parsecs nothing
30.659 parsecs
11 parsecs
About 135 parsecs.
260 +/- 20 parsecs.
A distance of one million parsecs (approximately 3,262,000 light-years) is commonly denoted by the megaparsec(Mpc).
The distance is 41 parsecs (approx 134 lightyears).
Rigel is 260 +/-20 parsecs away.
Light years or Parsecs
267 parsecs
Parsec is a unit of distance, arcseconds of angle, so in principle, the two can't be converted. However, if an object has a parallax of 5 milliarcseconds (0.005 arc-seconds), the distance in parsecs, from Earth, would be 1 / 0.005 = 200 parsecs.
The distance from Earth is about 6,500 light years (2000 parsecs).