mooohiytsert
They are called Core Burning Stars the smallest one is OGLE-TR-122b.
The group of stars found in the constellation Leo is known as the "Regulus". It is one of the brightest stars in the sky and forms the heart of the lion in the constellation Leo. Regulus is a multiple star system composed of four stars.
A system of billions of stars held together by gravity is called a galaxy. The one we live in is called the Milky Way galaxy.
because when he looked at the sky he saw the stars he connected the stars and he connected one and he called it big dipper because he was the first one to discover the big dipper.
Not necessarily: There are also other types of "groups of stars". The International Astronomical Union has divided the sky, and all of the fairly bright stars, into 88 recognized constellations. A grouping that isn't one of the official 88 constellations is an "asterism". For example, one of the common groupings that we talk about all the time is the Big Dipper, which is NOT a constellation! The official constellation is Ursa Major, the Great Bear; the central part of Ursa Major contains the 8 "Big Dipper" stars, and many others as well.
Constallation
Yes. A group of stars called a galaxy. One of billions in the Universe. An awesome thing it is too. Truly awesome.
A group of stars which seem to form a pattern, are known as a constellation. One example is the 'Big Dipper.'
They are called Core Burning Stars the smallest one is OGLE-TR-122b.
One who studies the stars is called a(n)... Astrologist
That is a galaxy. The one we live in is called the Milky Way. There are millions of other galaxies in the universe, many of which have a spiral structure (and probably a black hole in the middle).
A group of stars (and, by implication, any planets they may have) "travelling together" is called a moving group or association. One locally prominent moving group is the Ursa Major moving group, which includes most of the stars in the Big Dipper (as well as several other stars in Ursa Major and other constellations). The two "ends" of the dipper are not part of the group, but all the ones in the middle are moving in the same direction (towards Sagittarius) and at roughly the same speed. This makes the Big Dipper one of the few asterisms where most of the stars actually are "related" to each other in some way.
The group of stars found in the constellation Leo is known as the "Regulus". It is one of the brightest stars in the sky and forms the heart of the lion in the constellation Leo. Regulus is a multiple star system composed of four stars.
a constellation is a group of stars and a star is one star
There is one called 'Carboxyl' and one called amino group
A group of kittens is called a kindle or litter (group of young cats born to one female).
Orion is a constellation (group of stars) not a single star.