Epsilon Sagittarius (Kaus Australis) is the southern portion of the bow.
Epsilon Sagittarii, at magnitude 1.85, is the brightest star in the constellation.
Yes, Epsilon Sagittarii (Kaus Australis) is the brightest star in the constellation Sagittarius. It has an apparent visual magnitude of +1.8.
Epsilon Sagittarii (Kaus Australis) is the brightest star in the constellation Sagittarius with an apparent visual magnitude of +1.8.
The dimmest star in the defined area called Sagittarius is SWEEPS J175902.00-291323.7 with an apparent magnitude of +26.23.The dimmest star in the zodiac Sagittarius is ο Sgr (Manubrij or Manubrium) with an apparent magnitude of +3.76
Sagittarius is a constellation not a star XD
I would guess they are all important - otherwise it wouldn't appear to look like an Archer.The brightest star is Epsilon Sagittarii
Yes, the Sagittarius constellation is part of a big star group. The Sagittarius constellation outlines a centaur who is carrying a bow and borders the constellations of Scutum, Scorpius, and Indus.
Epsilon Sagittarii (Kaus Australis) is Sagittarius' brightest star at a magnitude of +1.85. It is a B class star: blue white in color.
There is no star with that name. Many stars have names that start with "Epsilon", followed by the genitive of a constellation, e.g. "Epsilon Cruxis", "Epsilon Geminorum", etc. If its epsilon segin cassiopeia, it is 520L/Y(light years) away from earth.
The Pegasus constellation is named after the mythical winged-horsed in Greek legend. The brightest star of the constellation is the Epsilon Pegasi or Enif.
A star chart
There is no such thing as an "epsilon star". There are several stars that have "epsilon" in their names; basically one for every constellation, so "Epsilon" followed by the genitive for example, Epsilon Eridani, Epsilon Crucis, Epsilon Canis Maioris, etc.