A "constellation" is one of two things:
1. An asterism, or group of stars considered together for easier recognition;
2. One of 88 divisions of the sky (most of which contain some asterisms) for the purpose of locating stars and other objects.
Of the former group, different peoples have named certain asterisms and made up stories about them as aids to memory. Many of the ones that science eventually standardized come from the stories of the Ancient Greeks.
It's worth knowing that the constellations/asterisms are NOT REALLY THERE in the sense that the stars that make them up are more than coincidentally in the (apparently) same place.
Suppose you could only look out of one window (as we, confined to the Earth and the Solar System, have only one "window" on the Universe). Through it, you might see a clothes pole, a church steeple and a distant mountain all within a finger's width of each other, but these things wouldn't be in those positions to someone looking at them from another house.
The three stars in Orion's Belt, for example, are almost as far from each other as they are from us.
Constellations
A group of stars that form a picture (at least in human eyes) is known as a constellation.
No, the moon is not a constellation. The moon is a natural satellite that orbits the Earth, while a constellation is a group of stars that form a pattern in the sky as seen from Earth.
A constellation is a group of stars that form a recognizable pattern when viewed from Earth. Each constellation has a name and mythology associated with it.
The constellation you are referring to is Orion. The three stars that form an "M" shape (or "W" shape when flipped) in Orion are Mintaka, Alnilam, and Alnitak, collectively known as Orion's Belt.
Constellations
A group of stars that form a picture (at least in human eyes) is known as a constellation.
The brightest stars in the constellation form the letter "M" or the letter "W". This can help stargazers easily identify and locate the constellation in the night sky.
A group of stars that form a pattern in the sky is called a constellation. People have created imaginative stories and myths surrounding these groupings of stars throughout history.
A constellation is a group of stars that form a figure or design. Orion being one example.
A constellation is a group of stars that form a figure or design. Orion being one example.
constellation
a constellation
No, the moon is not a constellation. The moon is a natural satellite that orbits the Earth, while a constellation is a group of stars that form a pattern in the sky as seen from Earth.
A constellation is a group of stars that form a recognizable pattern when viewed from Earth. Each constellation has a name and mythology associated with it.
A group of stars that form a picture is called a constellation. These patterns are recognized and named by different cultures around the world.
Orion is a constellation, not a star or a galaxy. It is a prominent constellation in the night sky, named after a mythological hunter in Greek mythology. The stars within the Orion constellation form a recognizable pattern that is visible during certain times of the year.