Besides the stars that you can see, there are five visible planets; Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. Venus and Jupiter are generally brighter than any stars.
Additionally, there are about 500 visible nebulas, which are tiny cloud-like structures. Some are gas clouds, some are galaxies, and some are supernova remnants, but these are all around stars, contain stars, or used to be stars.
With the naked eye, they are pretty much star-like, but with a moderately powerful telescope you will be able to see the details of them.
Stars shine all the time but you can only see them at night due to the darkness.
All of the stars you see at night are suns.
You can see all of them in the sky at night.
No. All the stars you see at night are in our galaxy, but outside of the solar system. The only star in our solar system is the one at its center: the sun.
No. All the stars you see at night are in our galaxy. Stars in other galaxies are much too far away to be seen without a powerful telescope.
There is no perfect day. All you need is a clear night.
yes you can se star and night at the same every night because every night there are stars.
The moon and stars are both out at night.
All the stars you can see in the night sky are part of our galaxy, the Milky Way.
Yes. All the stars you can see at night are in the Milky Way.
No. All the stars at night that are actually stars are well beyond the solar system. Five "stars" that you sometimes see are actually planets in our solar system: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. The only actual star in our solar system is the sun.
Yes. There is a common myth that the stars you see at night have burnt out in the millions of years it takes for their light to reach us.This is not true for two reasons.The stars you see at night are in usually no more than a few hundred light years away, so you see them as they were, at most, a few hundred years ago.Most stars last for billions of years, so a period of a few million years, let alone a few hundred, is not significant.