Gemini is made up of many, many stars - each one having it's own relative distance form Earth. It only looks like Gemini from our perspective... in another solar system, you wouldn't recognize it.
two of Gemini's stars are bright, the biggest one of the two however is Pollux. The two brightest stars in the Gemini constellation are what some people say are the "twins" that represent the Gemini constellation :)
there are seven stars in Pisces and none of them are very bright....it looks like a V in the sky and you can see it in october through December
Gemini and the other constellations have all types of star.
Castor and Pollux
The stars in any constellation all tend to be different distances from us. They just appear as a pattern as we look at them. Of the stars in Gemini, the nearest is 33.7 lightyears away. That is about 318,826,616,925,973 kilometres or 198,109,675,076,288 miles away.
Gemini is a constellation, not a specific object in the sky.
Cetus is a constellation, not a single star. Stars in the constellation can be from 8.73 (nearest) to 13,000 (furthest) light years away.
Because they're too far away
What is the distance from Gemini to the sun
You can't really say how far a constellation is. A constellation is just a group of stars, and even though the stars in a constellation look close together in the sky, in reality they might be very far from each other. Some of the stars could be relatively close to us, and some much farther away. Really, the only question you can answer is how far from earth is each individual star in Perseus is.
The stars in each constellation are at varying distances from our solar system. The star Wolf 359, one of the nearest stars to Earth (7.78 light-years), is in Leo. Gliese 436, a faint star in Leo about 33 light years away. So to answer your question, the constellation Leo is spread out between 7 to 33 light years away. Light travels about 6 trillion miles in one year, so between 42 trillion and 198 trillion miles away.
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 closest constellation is 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 light years away.
Thinks of a constellation as being, basically, a direction in space - the stars are not related one to another. So, some of the stars in that direction are billions of light-years away from us, and of course, billions of light-years away from the nearer stars.
No, not usually. At least as far away from each other as our Sun is to its closest star.
No, they are not. They are in lines of sight which are close to each other and they are all so far away that they do not appear to move very much relative to one another. But in most constellations some stars are likely to by hundreds, if not millions, of times as far away than the nearest stars.