Capricornus
Capricornus, The Goat, is a faint constellation that is seldom recognized or viewed; it would be almost unknow if it were not in the zodiac. It can be found by tracing down the three stars in the Eagle's head, which point toward the Goat's tail. And the star at the tip of the horn lies on a straight line from Altair to Fomalhaut. That star, Deneb Algedi, lying 39 light years from Earth, is a type A eclipsing binary, orbited every 24 hours by a very close companion. The other two stars in the system are very faint and much farther out from the primary. Nashira is a type A (or F - two different sources give two different spectal types) giant star lying at a distance of 139 light years from us. Algedi is an optical double but the two stars are not close together nor are they part of the same system. Dabih is a quintuple system lying 328 light years distant. It consists of a triple system and a binary system, revolving around each other every 700,000 years. These two parts of the Dabih system are so far apart that they can be seen as double in a small telescope. The brightest star in the triple system is a type K giant with an absolute magnitude of -2. The Goat is host to M30, a globular star cluster of magnitude 7, lying about 26,000 light years from Earth. It can be seen as a tiny smudge in the photo below.
If a really bright star shows up in Capricornus, it is undoutedly a planet.