yes it does. it is also called the Little Dipper. the tail in the Little Dipper is the North star. :-) There is another constellation called the Ursa Major or the Big Dipper. :-)
Yes, it's the alpha-star in Ursa Minor.
Polaris is the North Star and it is located in the constellation Ursa Minor.
Ursa Minor. Currently. (Which star is "the north star" changes very slowly because the Earth "wobbles".) In about 10,000 years the north star will be Vega, which is in the constellation Lyra. The north celestial pole can also point to the locations within the constellations Draco, Cygnus, and Hercules over its 26,000 year long cycle.
Ursa Minor - the north star, Polaris, is part of it.
Ursa Minor, also known as the Little Dipper, contains seven main stars. The most well-known star in Ursa Minor is Polaris, which is also called the North Star.
Yes, it's the alpha-star in Ursa Minor.
Polaris is the North Star and it is located in the constellation Ursa Minor.
Ursa Minor. Currently. (Which star is "the north star" changes very slowly because the Earth "wobbles".) In about 10,000 years the north star will be Vega, which is in the constellation Lyra. The north celestial pole can also point to the locations within the constellations Draco, Cygnus, and Hercules over its 26,000 year long cycle.
The North Star can be found in the constellation Ursa Minor.
The North Star is located in the constellation Ursa Minor.
Ursa Minor, the small bear.
Ursa Minor, the little bear
The north star Polaris is at the tip of the tail in the constellation "Ursa Minor".
Ursa Minor is a constellation not a star
Yes, Polaris is located in the constellation Ursa Minor, not Ursa Major. It is commonly known as the North Star because it sits almost directly above the North Pole.
Ursa Minor - the north star, Polaris, is part of it.
The north star, Polaris, is part of the constellation Ursa Minor, the "Little Bear".