Zosma I think not sure
The dimmest star in the universe that we know of is known as 2MASS J0523-1403, located about 40 light-years away from Earth. It has a luminosity that is only 0.0000000001 times that of the Sun, making it extremely faint and challenging to detect.
The dimmest star in the Pegasus constellation is likely to be one of its fainter stars, which may not have a common name but is listed with a designation such as HD 209087 or similar. These dim stars may be harder to observe with the naked eye or small telescopes due to their low brightness compared to brighter stars in the constellation.
The dimmest star in the Big Dipper is Alkaid, which is located at the end of the handle opposite the bowl. Alkaid is a hot blue B-type main sequence star and is around 100 times more luminous than the Sun.
The pulsation period of a Cepheid star typically ranges from a few days to a few months. This period is directly related to the star's intrinsic brightness, making Cepheids useful for measuring astronomical distances.
I believe it is the Pleiades, Messier 45. The current best estimate at its distance is 135 parsecs, or about 440 light years away. Also as an interesting aside in Japanese it is known as Subaru and is used as the companies logo as seen on the front of its cars.
Deneb is the dimmest star in Cygnus.
Gliese 229 is the dimmest star in the constellation Lepus
The dimmest star is Orion is HD 37605 with an apparentmagnitude of 8.69
dimmest stars in aquarius
Castor
The dimmest star in the universe that we know of is known as 2MASS J0523-1403, located about 40 light-years away from Earth. It has a luminosity that is only 0.0000000001 times that of the Sun, making it extremely faint and challenging to detect.
6
the monkey eats corn for dinner
the positive is the dimmest star. the negative is the brightest star.
The dimmest star in the Phoenix constellation is HD 201626, which has an apparent magnitude of 5.59. It is a yellow-white F-type star located around 235 light-years away from Earth.
The dimmest star in the Pegasus constellation is likely to be one of its fainter stars, which may not have a common name but is listed with a designation such as HD 209087 or similar. These dim stars may be harder to observe with the naked eye or small telescopes due to their low brightness compared to brighter stars in the constellation.
The dimmest star in the Big Dipper is Alkaid, which is located at the end of the handle opposite the bowl. Alkaid is a hot blue B-type main sequence star and is around 100 times more luminous than the Sun.