Roughly speaking, a constellation is a direction in the sky. This is like asking "how far is left", or "how far is up". It starts right here, and goes all the way to infinity. Or however far the Universe reaches.
If you mean the constellation cancer, there is no such thing as a "distance to a constellation". It just doesn't make sense. A constellation is basically a general direction in space.
the dist from earth to Grus
Cancer is a region of the sky, not an object at a distance.The star DX Cancri in Cancer is about 12 light-years from Earth. (It cannot be seen with the naked eye.)Cancer also contains Messier 67, a star cluster about 2500 light-years from Earth.There may be closer objects too, and there are certainly more distant objects. At any distance, these are all within the constellation of Cancer.
Like all constellations, they are made up of stars - each one it's own unique distance from Earth. Therefor a constellation isn't a specific distance from Earth.
Any constellation is a group of stars that appear to form some kind of pattern, but have no connection with each other. They all happen to be in roughly the same direction from us, but they're all at different distances. So there's no such thing as a constellation's distance from us.
If you mean the constellation cancer, there is no such thing as a "distance to a constellation". It just doesn't make sense. A constellation is basically a general direction in space.
Beta is not a constellation.
Any constellation is a group of stars that appear to form some kind of pattern, but have no connection with each other. They all happen to be in roughly the same direction from us, but they're all at different distances. So there's no such thing as a constellation's distance from us.
the dist from earth to Grus
Cancer is a region of the sky, not an object at a distance.The star DX Cancri in Cancer is about 12 light-years from Earth. (It cannot be seen with the naked eye.)Cancer also contains Messier 67, a star cluster about 2500 light-years from Earth.There may be closer objects too, and there are certainly more distant objects. At any distance, these are all within the constellation of Cancer.
Like all constellations, they are made up of stars - each one it's own unique distance from Earth. Therefor a constellation isn't a specific distance from Earth.
A constellation is basically a general direction in space. It doesn't have a definite distance. Different stars in a constellation are at different distances. The closest star from Earth happens to be in the Centaurus constellation, at a distance of about 4.2 light-years. But please note that other stars in the same constellation are much, much farther from us.A constellation is basically a general direction in space. It doesn't have a definite distance. Different stars in a constellation are at different distances. The closest star from Earth happens to be in the Centaurus constellation, at a distance of about 4.2 light-years. But please note that other stars in the same constellation are much, much farther from us.A constellation is basically a general direction in space. It doesn't have a definite distance. Different stars in a constellation are at different distances. The closest star from Earth happens to be in the Centaurus constellation, at a distance of about 4.2 light-years. But please note that other stars in the same constellation are much, much farther from us.A constellation is basically a general direction in space. It doesn't have a definite distance. Different stars in a constellation are at different distances. The closest star from Earth happens to be in the Centaurus constellation, at a distance of about 4.2 light-years. But please note that other stars in the same constellation are much, much farther from us.
Any constellation is a group of stars that appear to form some kind of pattern, but have no connection with each other. They all happen to be in roughly the same direction from us, but they're all at different distances. So there's no such thing as a constellation's distance from us.
14,554,6488,654,332,215,900,890,000 light-years from the planet Earth
i don't know because i am a kid
1.2Light Years away to be exact.
It doesn't make sense to talk about the distance to a constellation, or even about the average distance. A constellation is basically a direction in space. In other words, that's like asking "how far is North", or "what is the average distance to 'up'".It doesn't make sense to talk about the distance to a constellation, or even about the average distance. A constellation is basically a direction in space. In other words, that's like asking "how far is North", or "what is the average distance to 'up'".It doesn't make sense to talk about the distance to a constellation, or even about the average distance. A constellation is basically a direction in space. In other words, that's like asking "how far is North", or "what is the average distance to 'up'".It doesn't make sense to talk about the distance to a constellation, or even about the average distance. A constellation is basically a direction in space. In other words, that's like asking "how far is North", or "what is the average distance to 'up'".