This question may have more than one answer. However considering the fact of light pollution Deneb is the farthest star from earth and can be seen with naked eyes. Deneb is one of the most luminous stars known, 60000 times brighter than the sun. Deneb is 1600 light years away. If Deneb was at the distance of Sirius (8.611 light years) it would rival moon in brightness. If it were at the distance of Alpha Centauri you could comfortably read with its light. The mass of Deneb is 25 times of the Sun.
Deneb is the part of Cygnus constellation
Scientists will never know the farthest star from Earth, as the star is so far away that its light has not, nor will ever, have enough time to reach Earth. Even the stars within the visible universe are far too numerous to count, but the farthest one that humans have ever detected is about 55 million light years away. This incredibly distant star is called SDSS J 122952.66 +112227.8.
The farthest object that scientists have discovered is a galaxy by the name of UDFj-39546284. This is a very early galaxy that is about 13.2 billion light years away. However, scientists are constantly improving their visualization technology, and they hope to find even more distant objects in the near future. The star Deneb is the farthest star that can be easily seen with the naked eye. It is thought to be between 1,400 and 3,000 light years from Earth. Deneb is one of the brightest in the northern sky and is part the constellation Cygnus, the Swan.
The Sun is the closest star to the planet Earth. The Earth orbits the Sun at a distance of about 93 million miles. Scientists use this distance as a convenient unit of measure for astronomical distances. Scientists call this distance one “astronomical unit,” often abbreviated AU.
Icarus the supergiant star (officially named MACS J1149+2223 Lensed Star 1) lives more than halfway across the observable universe. It's much bigger than our own sun and hundreds of thousands of times brighter. Despite its brilliance, it still took nine billion years for its shining light to reach Earth.
0 Comments