Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 26. Chapters: List of nearest stars, Thuban, List of stars in Draco, Cat's Eye Nebula, Kepler-10b, Draco Dwarf, Epsilon Draconis, Sigma Draconis, GSC 03549-02811, Delta Draconis, Kepler-4b, Gamma Draconis, 26 Draconis, HIP 56948, Zeta Draconis, TrES-2b, NGC 5866, Gliese 687, Beta Draconis, CM Draconis, Nu Draconis, Theta Draconis, NGC 5866 Group, Iota Draconis, GJ 742, BY Draconis, List of the star names in Draco, Phi Draconis, HD 158633, Mu Draconis, Struve 2398, 3C 371, Chi Draconis, Xi Draconis, NGC 5907, Psi Draconis, HD 139357 b, Iota Draconis b, 2M 1237+6526, 42 Draconis, HD 167042 b, Kappa Draconis, Tadpole Galaxy, Abell 2218, NGC 4236, AG Draconis, Lambda Draconis, 42 Draconis b, NGC 4319, NGC 6340, NGC 4125, UGC 11066, NGC 4121, 3C 401, 3C 390.3, 3C 249.1, NGC 5879, Omicron Draconis, 3C 305, SN 2005B, Mother Camels. Excerpt: This is the list of notable stars in the constellation Draco. This list of nearest stars contains all known stars and brown dwarfs at a distance of up to five parsecs (16.308 light-years) from the Solar System, ordered by increasing distance. In addition to the Solar System, there are another 50 stellar systems currently known lying within this distance. These systems contain a total of 61 hydrogen-fusing stars and 8 brown dwarfs. All of them are in the Milky Way Galaxy, and more specifically within the Local Spur. Only nine of these objects (about 13%) have an apparent magnitude less than 6.5, and thus can possibly be observed with the naked eye; the lower the apparent magnitude the brighter they appear to observers on Earth. Besides the Sun, only three are first-magnitude stars: Alpha Centauri, Sirius, and Procyon. Stars visible to the naked eye have their magnitude shown in light blue below. The classes of the stars and brown dwarfs are shown in the color of their spectral types. These colors...