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The Little Dipper constellation contains seven main stars, including Polaris, the North Star.
There are seven main stars that make up "The Little Dipper" Ursa Minor.
The Little Dipper, also known as Ursa Minor, has seven main stars that form its shape. These stars are much fainter than the stars in the Big Dipper, but they are still visible in the night sky.
The Little Dipper (also: Little Bear, or scientifically: Ursa Minor) is made up of seven main stars.
The Little Dipper is part of the Ursa Minor constellation and is home to the North Star, also known as Polaris. Other notable stars in the Little Dipper include Kochab and Pherkad, which form the two outer stars in the bowl of the dipper.
Seven stars make up the Little Dipper.
The Little Dipper constellation contains seven main stars, including Polaris, the North Star.
There are seven main stars that make up "The Little Dipper" Ursa Minor.
The Little Dipper, also known as Ursa Minor, has seven main stars that form its shape. These stars are much fainter than the stars in the Big Dipper, but they are still visible in the night sky.
The big and the little dipper are each made up of many stars; each has a different life expentancy.The big and the little dipper are each made up of many stars; each has a different life expentancy.The big and the little dipper are each made up of many stars; each has a different life expentancy.The big and the little dipper are each made up of many stars; each has a different life expentancy.
The Little Dipper (also: Little Bear, or scientifically: Ursa Minor) is made up of seven main stars.
The Little Dipper is part of the Ursa Minor constellation and is home to the North Star, also known as Polaris. Other notable stars in the Little Dipper include Kochab and Pherkad, which form the two outer stars in the bowl of the dipper.
The Little Dipper, also known as Ursa Minor, has seven main stars that form its shape, with the brightest one being Polaris, the North Star.
No. Venus is a planet. The Little Dipper is a constellation and they're comprised of stars.
The little dipper is in our Milky Way Galaxy, actually not all that far from us. It is above the big dipper, so that it appears to be pouring into the big dipper. If you can see the north star, that is the tail (or end of the handle) of the little dipper. The middle stars of the little dipper are somewhat faint, but the two outside stars of the top and bottom of the little dipper pan are about as bright as the north star.
The Little Dipper is not a single object but a constellation of stars. Therefore, it does not have a surface temperature. The stars within the Little Dipper constellation have varying surface temperatures depending on their size, age, and composition.
The Little Dipper was not named after anybody.