GeminiFor information on the US space program named Gemini see Gemini program.{| border="1" align="right" width="330"\n|-\n| align=center colspan=2 bgcolor=silver style="padding-top: 1.5ex; padding-bottom: 1ex" | Gemini\n|-\n| align=center colspan=2 | \n|-\n| Abbreviation\n| Gem\n|-\n| Genitive\n| Geminorum\n|-\n| Meaning in English\n| the Twins\n|-\n| Right ascension\n| 7 h\n|-\n| Declination\n| 20°\n|-\n| Visible to latitude\n| Between 90° and −60°\n|-\n| Best visible\n| Feburary\n|-\n| Area- Total\n| Ranked 30th 514 sq. deg.\n|-\n| Number of stars with apparent magnitude < 3\n| 4\n|-\n| Brightest star - Apparent magnitude\n| Pollux (β Gem) 1.1\n|-\n| Meteor showers\n|\n*Geminids\n*Rho Geminids\n|-\n| Bordering constellations\n|\n*Lynx\n*Auriga\n*Taurus\n*Orion\n*Monoceros\n*Canis Minor\n*Cancer\n|} Gemini (the twins) is one of the constellations of the zodiac. It is part of the winter sky, lying between Taurus to the west and the dim Cancer to the east, with Auriga and the near-invisible Lynx to the north and Monoceros and Canis Minor to the south. The Gemini program is named for it.
|
||||
"A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on." - Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965) |
\n|-\n| Abbreviation\n| Gem\n|-\n| 