The seven stars are called the Big Dipper or the Plow.
groups go vertically and periods are the horizontal rows
The rotator cuff muscles, including the supraspinatus, infraspinatus, teres minor, and subscapularis, surround the shoulder joint. They help stabilize and move the shoulder joint in various directions.
The Seven Sisters, or The Pleiades, isn't a constellation. It's an open cluster of many, many stars - therefore each one has it's own magnitude. However, the open cluster itself has a combined apparent magnitude of 1.6
An element with seven electrons is called nitrogen.
Saturn
Ursa Minor is known as the Little Bear.
In the US, the seven brightest stars within Ursa Minor are commonly referred to as the "Little Dipper." This asterism is part of the larger constellation Ursa Minor, which is also known as the Little Bear. The most prominent star in this group is Polaris, the North Star, which has been historically used for navigation.
Big dipper.
6 stars. they are the Polaris (north star) ,Kochab, Pherkad, Yildun, Ahfa al Farkadain, and Anwar al Farkadain.
Ursa Major is the "Big Dipper" in the US. In the UK it is the Plough.
The Little Dipper, also known as Ursa Minor, has seven main stars that form its shape, with the brightest one being Polaris, the North Star.
The constellation commonly referred to as the Seven Sisters is the Pleiades. It is an open star cluster located in the constellation of Taurus. Its seven brightest stars are visible to the naked eye and have been referenced in various mythologies and cultures throughout history.
That asterism in Ursa Major, ( the Great Bear) is known as the "plough" or the "pan" in Europe and the "Big Dipper" in the US.
An asterism formed by the seven brightest stars of ursa-minor, the most conspicuous of which are the North Star (polaris-astronomy, Alpha Ursae Minoris) and the two front bowl stars, kochab-astronomyand Pherkad (Beta and Gamma). The ursa-major-and-ursa-minorlooks like a miniature and much fainter version of the well-known big-dipper.
Yes, The Big Bear is an asterism made up of the seven brightest stars from the constellation Ursa Major. This asterism is commonly known as the Big Dipper in North America.
The seven stars in the constellation Ursa Minor are commonly known as the Little Dipper and include: Kochab, Pherkad, Yildun, Anwar al Farkadain, Akhfa al Farkadain, and star pair Alkaid and Benetnasch.
An asterism formed by the seven brightest stars of ursa-minor, the most conspicuous of which are the North Star (polaris-astronomy, Alpha Ursae Minoris) and the two front bowl stars, kochab-astronomyand Pherkad (Beta and Gamma). The ursa-major-and-ursa-minorlooks like a miniature and much fainter version of the well-known big-dipper.