Ursa Major does not have a surface. Ursa Major is a constellation. It is therefore a collection of stars. All of those stars would be very different.
Because it looks like a huge bear... Ursa Major=Great Bear
Ursa Major means "great bear", and the constellation was thought to look like a bear.
Ursa Major IS a constellation.
No. Ursa Major is not on the ecliptic.
Richard. A. Proctor named Ursa Major in 1869.
Because it looks like a huge bear... Ursa Major=Great Bear
ursa major would look like an ocean
Because it looks like a huge bear... Ursa Major=Great Bear
Ursa Major is a constellation, made up of many different stars. "It" doesn't have a temperature. Each star in it has it's own temperature.
Ursa Major means "great bear", and the constellation was thought to look like a bear.
Ursa Major IS a constellation.
Ursa Major
No. Ursa Major is often used as a way to find it, as part of it points towards it, but it is not actually in Ursa Major. It is in fact in Ursa Minor.
Ursa Major
Ursa Major isn't a physical object. It's a specific region of the sky containing millions of stars, most of them in distant galaxies far too dim to see. Since it has no "surface" the question is meaningless (it's like asking what color F sharp is).
The big dipper are the seven brightest of the formal constellation Ursa Major.
No. Ursa Major is not on the ecliptic.