Sirius is Earth's brightest star, visible only to few planets and ISS. Located 8.6 light-years away, Sirius has mass twice that of Sun. Sirius B, its companion, is 10,000 times dimmer than Sirius A
Starseeds are mature souls from other solar systems or star constellations. Universe contains one billion trillion stars and billions of secret worlds. Starseeds can have lived in multiple galaxies and spacetime platforms
Canis Major is a southern hemisphere constellation containing Sirius, the brightest star. Named "greater dog" in Latin, following Orion's hunting dog. Covers 380 square degrees, ranking 43rd among 88 modern constellations
Canis Major follows Orion from southeast to southwest in winter. Sirius marks the dog's collar, while bright stars mark its feet and tail. Canis Major is one of Orion's hunting dogs pursuing a rabbit
Sirius and Fortuna share silver hair and amethyst-colored eyes. Sirius's hair is longer than Fortuna's, possibly due to time. Sirius's elf-like ears and strength suggest possible elf connection
Stars appear similar to naked eye but vary in size, color, mass, and composition. Magnitude indicates star brightness, lower values mean brighter. Some bright stars appear as single stars in multiple systems