Roughly/average 90 light years away. The seven stars in the Big Dipper constellation do not actually lie within the same plane; they are different distances from us. Below is a list of the stars and the approximate distance of each from our solar system. NAME & DISTANCE (in light years) Mizar 78
Merak 79
Megrez 81
Alioth 81
Phecda 84
Alkaid 101
Dubhe 124
You can see it all the time of you live in the Northern Hemisphere, unless you live really, REALLY south and the Dipper is low on the horizon... Find out where north is, wait for the sun to set, and you will EASILY see the Big Dipper in the north.
No, Jupiter is not located in the Big Dipper constellation. Jupiter is a bright planet that can often be seen in the night sky, but its position changes over time due to its orbit around the Sun. The Big Dipper is part of the Ursa Major constellation and does not contain any planets.
The Big Dipper is an asterism, not a constellation, and its stars are part of the Ursa Major constellation. The stars that make up the Big Dipper are mostly main sequence stars, like Dubhe and Merak. Main sequence stars are stars like our Sun that are fusing hydrogen into helium in their cores.
The Milky Way is our galaxy, a vast spiral system containing billions of stars, including our Sun. The Big Dipper, on the other hand, is an asterism within the constellation Ursa Major, containing seven bright stars that form a distinct shape resembling a ladle or dipper. The Milky Way is much larger and contains many more stars than the Big Dipper.
What is the distance from Gemini to the sun
no but it contains stars
the sun is a very big thing and is far away the moon is small compared to the sun and is near to us when the big sun goes far away it seems to be as big as the moon near to us
The sun is big but far away. the moon is close(er) but smallish
The planet closest to the Big Dipper in our solar system is Earth. The Big Dipper is just a pattern of stars in the constellation Ursa Major, whereas planets like Earth orbit the Sun.
The sun is very far away from the sun. In fact, the sun is 19,000,000 miles away from the earth.
You can see it all the time of you live in the Northern Hemisphere, unless you live really, REALLY south and the Dipper is low on the horizon... Find out where north is, wait for the sun to set, and you will EASILY see the Big Dipper in the north.
No, the big dipper (or Ursa Major) is not in the area of the sky that the planets move through. All of the planets, sun and moon are more or less on the same plane, so they all move in the same east/west line across the sky. Ursa Major is more to the north.
No, Jupiter is not located in the Big Dipper constellation. Jupiter is a bright planet that can often be seen in the night sky, but its position changes over time due to its orbit around the Sun. The Big Dipper is part of the Ursa Major constellation and does not contain any planets.
the sun is far away
The Big Dipper is an asterism, not a constellation, and its stars are part of the Ursa Major constellation. The stars that make up the Big Dipper are mostly main sequence stars, like Dubhe and Merak. Main sequence stars are stars like our Sun that are fusing hydrogen into helium in their cores.
It is far away from the sun and it has more space to revolve,so the length of the summer is big.
Neptune is 4,504,300,000 km away from the sun.