Horizon.
All of us
big bus, people cuss,
Orion is a constellation, not a galaxy. The stars in it appear to form a pattern but they are not a unit and they are all completely different distances away. So there is no definitive distance that you can say Orion is away from us. You can only talk about the distance of individual stars that are in it.
All the constellations appear to rotate round the pole star because the pole star is in line with the axis that the Earth rotates around with us on board.
Bellatrix, is the third brightest star in the constellation Orion. It is a blue giant and is around 240 light years from us.
The Orion nebula is part of our own galaxy (the Milky Way). The Orion nebula is about 1500 light-years away from us. Our galaxy is about 100000 light-years across.
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.
sounds like maybe lol idk you drive me crazy? can i cover you in gravy???
How about 'You're the only one who can save me'? It's not a perfect rhyme, but it works.
forget us
seen us
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.