Click on the link to your right for the location of the Coma Berenices.
Ursa Major, Leo Minor, Lynx (corner), Cancer, Hydra, Sextans, Crater, Virgo, Coma Berenices
The area of La Coma i la Pedra is 60.62 square kilometers.
The three main parts of a comet are the nucleus, coma, and tail. The nucleus is the head of the comet, the coma is the middle, and the tail is the end of the comet.
Comets have two distinct tails that form as they approach and enter earth's atmosphere. The tail that looks gray is the water that is melting from the heat mixing with the dust and debris of the comet, which is essentially a rock. The second tail, usually a bright blue color is the ion tail. It is made up of negatively charged particles.
An AuraThe "Coma".
Coma Berenices is a constellation near the Constellation of Leo. Historically it was an asterism (arrangement of stars), but is now one of the 88 constellations covering the night sky.
You are thinking of coma berenices, a constellation of stars near Leo.
The Black Eye Galaxy (M64) is located in the Coma Berenices constellation,See related link for more information, star map and pictures.
None of them. There is a queen in the sky - the constellation Cassiopeia - but she is actually a queen of ancient Ethiopia. There is another close match: Coma Berenices or Bernice's Hair. She was Greek royalty, but not a queen.
Berenice's Lock, also known as Coma Cluster of Galaxies, is a galaxy cluster. It is a group of galaxies held together by gravity, rather than being a single star. It is named after the constellation Coma Berenices where it is located.
Ursa Major, Leo Minor, Lynx (corner), Cancer, Hydra, Sextans, Crater, Virgo, Coma Berenices
Coma Berenices is made up of three main stars with a much fainter forth.* α Com - Diadem * β Com - Al Ḍafīrah * ρ Com - Shang Tseang * 21 - Com KissīnSee related link for a star map.
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.
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 BFB2004 NGC 4676 1176 galaxy (one of the background galaxies of the Mice Galaxies) is a spiral galaxy 6000 million light-years from Earth in the Coma Berenices constellation, and is 120,000 light-years in diameter, and contains about 200 billion stars.
Virgo is bordered by these constellations: Boötes Coma Berenices Leo Crater Corvus Hydra Libra Serpens Caput
The PGC 1762846 galaxy is a barred spiral galaxy 1000 million light-years from Earth (redshift of 0.07) in the Coma Berenices constellation, and is 100,000 light-years in diameter (same size as the Milky Way), and contains about 100 billion stars (same number of stars as the Milky Way). It emitted its light 1000 million years ago, when the universe was about 13,000 million years old.