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  2. List of brightest stars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_brightest_stars

    This is a list of stars arranged by their apparent magnitude – their brightness as observed from Earth. It includes all stars brighter than magnitude +2.50 in visible light, measured using a V-band filter in the UBV photometric system.

  3. Observable universe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe

    The observable universe contains as many as an estimated 2 trillion galaxies [36] [37] [38] and, overall, as many as an estimated 10 24 stars [39] [40] – more stars (and, potentially, Earth-like planets) than all the grains of beach sand on planet Earth. [41] [42] [43] Other estimates are in the hundreds of billions rather than trillions.

  4. Bright Star Catalogue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bright_Star_Catalogue

    The catalog lists 9,110 objects, of which 9,095 are stars, 11 are novae or supernovae (which were "bright stars" only at the time when they were at their peak), [1] and four are non-stellar objects which are the globular clusters 47 Tucanae (designated HR 95) and NGC 2808 (HR 3671), and the open clusters NGC 2281 (HR 2496) and Messier 67 (HR 3515).

  5. Stellar designations and names - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_designations_and_names

    Johann Bayer in 1603 listed about twice this number. Only in the 19th century did star catalogues list the naked-eye stars exhaustively. The Bright Star Catalogue, which is a star catalogue listing all stars of apparent magnitude 6.5 or brighter, or roughly every star visible to the naked eye from Earth, contains 9,096 stars. [1]

  6. Star catalogue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_catalogue

    The Guide Star Catalog is an online catalogue of stars produced for the purpose of accurately positioning and identifying stars satisfactory for use as guide stars by the Hubble Space Telescope program. The first version of the catalogue was produced in the late 1980s by digitizing photographic plates and contained about 20 million stars, out ...

  7. Star - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star

    Only about 4,000 of these stars are visible to the naked eye—all within the Milky Way galaxy. [2] ... who observed a number of stars, star clusters ...

  8. List of stars for navigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stars_for_navigation

    Under optimal conditions, approximately 6,000 stars are visible to the naked eye of an observer on Earth. [1] Of these, 58 stars are known in the field of navigational astronomy as "selected stars", including 19 stars of the first magnitude, 38 stars of the second magnitude, and Polaris . [ 1 ]

  9. Lists of stars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_stars

    The following is a list of particularly notable actual or hypothetical stars that have their own articles in Wikipedia, but are not included in the lists above. BPM 37093 — a diamond star Cygnus X-1 — X-ray source