yes
The Pavo constellation is best seen in the Southern Hemisphere during the months of July and August. It is most prominent in the night sky during these months.
The constellation bordered by Pavo and Grus is Tucana. It is a small constellation located in the southern sky and is best seen from the southern hemisphere. Tucana contains several notable deep-sky objects, including the Small Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of our Milky Way.
Yes. 12 stars within the Andromeda constellation are known to have planets, some more than one.
At over 772 light years away, it is difficult to say if this Star has any planets, yet alone if there are any moons of those planets. Theres a chance, but we may never know the answer.
There is no star by that name. There is a constellation with the name Eridanus. That constellation, like any constellation, contains many stars, at different distances.---ANSWER---Just a sub note.I believe what you may be refering to in the question is the star Epsilon Erandi. At 10.5 ly away i believe it is the closest star to have confirmed extra solar planets orbiting it.
29 stars are in the constellation pavo!
Pavo is known as the "Peacock" constellation because it resembles the shape of a peacock when the stars are connected.
Constellation Pavo is bordered by:OctansApusAraTelescopiumIndus
a constellation is a group of stars that from a picture
consollation
the constellation Pavo, is also known as the Peacock, in the undead language, Latin
The constellation Pavo, also known as the Peacock, contains around 71 stars that are visible to the naked eye.
Any constellation is a group of stars that appear to form some kind of pattern, but have no connection with each other. They all happen to be in roughly the same direction from us, but they're all at different distances. So there's no such thing as a constellation's distance from us.
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The Pavo constellation is best seen in the Southern Hemisphere during the months of July and August. It is most prominent in the night sky during these months.
It's called Pavo, from the Latin word for peacock.
No, they are all stars. Planets do not "make" any constellations but they may be present around a constellation's stars. Also, the big dipper is not a constellation. It's an asterism. It's part of the constellation Ursa Major.