Yes. The view of the stars on Mars is the same as it is on Earth.
On the way to Mars you will see all the constellations that you can see from Earth, but they will all be visible 24 hours a day (except the ones that are blocked by the Sun). Because the stars are all much further away than Mars, the constellations will look exactly the same.
Our galaxy, the Milky Way, is a spiral galaxy (actually a bared spiral) and new stars are being born in the spiral arms.
Most stars get their energy in the same way as our Sun. Remember: our Sun is a star; stars are suns.
Those stars except Polaris or the North Pole stars really orbit the Milky Way Galaxy but not Outside
All stars are formed the same way, by the condensation of large clouds of interstellar gas.
NO!!! this is becaus e when you look up in the sky you do not see all of the stars in a line facing any direction in the same way......
New stars are being born all the time. The rate of star formation in the Milky Way is about 7 new stars a year.
all stars are not all the same (blue giants, red giants, red dwarfs), however the sun is a star. it just appears bigger in the sky because it is way, way, way closer than all other stars.
No, the sun was born in the same way as most animals, most people are unaware of the fact the sun came from Adam and Eve.
The same way all mamals are born.
Bellatrix is in the same galaxy that we are in: the Milky Way. All the stars you see at night are in the Milky Way.
All the stars you see are part of the Milky Way, and so are we. So you could say they are the same distance. There is a particular patch through the sky which we particularly refer to as the Milky Way, and there are many stars that are nearer to us than that.
One thing is that they all seem to follow the same basic procedure of stellar evolution we observe among the stars in our own galaxy.
The stars throughout the disk.
By the gravity compression of interstellar gases - same as all other stars.
from it's mom?! The same way all mammals are born.