Alpha Arietis (Hamal) is the brightest star in Aries. Beta Arietis (Sheratan) is the blue-white beta star of the constellation Aries.
There are three main stars found in the constellation Aries, Alpha Arietis, Beta Arietis, and Gamma Arietis.
Aries is not a star; it is a constellation, a grouping of stars that some people thought looked like a ram. Aries is one of twelve constellations in the Zodiac, which lie along the ecliptic. The Ecliptic is like the "equator in the stars", which is the plane of the Earth's orbit.
Beta Cancri is the brightest star in the constellation Cancer. Its common name is Altarf.
There is no single star called "alpha" or "beta". The brightest stars (usually) in each constellation are called "alpha" and "beta", followed by the Latin genitiv of the constellation; for example, "alpha centauri", "beta centauri", "alpha orionis", "alpha cruxis", etc.
Aries is a "constellation" not a single star.
The Pegasus Constellation has several primary stars. They are Markib, Alpha Andromedae, Alpha Pegasi, Beta Pegasi, and Algenib. Alpha Pegasi is the brightest star in the grouping.
Alpha Arietis (Hamal) is the brightest star in the constellation Aries. It is located about 66 light years from Earth.
Beta and Alpha Herculis are both 2nd Magnitude (2.78) stars
Three of the brightest stars are called alpha apodis, beta apodis, and gamma apodis.
The primary star in a constellation is called the "Alpha" star - it's almost always the brightest one in the constellation. "Beta" is the second brightest, and it follows the Greek Alphabet as the stars get dimmer... Polaris is the North Star located in the constellation Ursa Minor - the Little Bear.
The brightest star in a constellation is known as the alpha star. It is typically designated as the first letter of the Greek alphabet followed by the genitive form of the constellation name. For example, Alpha Centauri is the brightest star in the Centaurus constellation.
The brightest star in the constellation Delphinus is called Sualocin, which is an Arabic name that means "the serpent." It is a blue-white main sequence star located approximately 240 light-years away from Earth.