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- Lacerta Group | Plastic Packaging Manufacturers
Since 1993, we’ve recycled over 150 million pounds of plastic material As the leading plastic packaging manufacturer, Lacerta Group offers our customers sustainable, high-quality, and cost-effective food packaging solutions
- Lacerta - Wikipedia
Lacerta is typical of Milky Way constellations: no bright galaxies, nor globular clusters, but instead open clusters, for example NGC 7243, the faint planetary nebula IC 5217 and quite a few double stars It also contains the prototypic blazar BL Lacertae Lacerta contains no Messier objects
- Lacerta Constellation
Lacerta is a small constellation in the northern sky It represents the lizard It is a faint constellation that lies in the rich field of the Milky Way’s bright band, in the region between the brighter constellations of Andromeda, Cassiopeia, Pegasus, and Cygnus
- Lacerta Constellation | Star Map Facts | Go Astronomy
Lacerta, Latin for lizard, is a small, faint constellation located in the northern celestial hemisphere Despite its low profile in terms of brightness, Lacerta is rich in celestial objects and contributes to our understanding of the universe
- Lacerta - noirlab. edu
It is a faint constellation that was created in 1687 by the astronomer Johannes Hevelius Its distinct, but faint W shape is often compared to its brighter northern hemisphere counterpart, Cassiopeia Alpha Lacertae is a blue-white main sequence star of magnitude 3 8 It is an optical double star
- Lacerta Constellation - Key Facts, Star Map, Mythology
Lacerta ("the lizard") is a small northern sky constellation whose brightest star is Alpha Lacertae, a blue dwarf 102 light years away
- Lacerta (The Lizard) Constellation - TheSkyLive
Lacerta (pronounced ləˈsɜːrtə) is the Latin name of a constellation situated north of the celestial equator As such, it is more easily visible from the northern hemisphere
- Lacerta | Star, Constellation Galaxy | Britannica
Lacerta, constellation in the northern sky at about 22 5 hours right ascension and 45° north in declination Its brightest star is Alpha Lacertae, with a magnitude of 3 8
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