No. Stars are balls of gas, specifically Hydrogen and Helium.
Shooting stars, when a bit of rock or other material burns up in the Earth's atmosphere, are relatively common. However, comets, which are balls of rock and ice are rarer.
SLEET
Yes. A moon revolves around a planet, which is also around a sky. Stars are balls of gas in the sky.
It is not possible to create a constellation of stars using ping pong balls. Constellations are patterns of stars in the sky that are millions of light years away and cannot be replicated with ping pong balls.
Those white things in the sky happen to be stars which are balls of gasses, or they could be planets.
Balls of gas that appear in the night sky are called stars. They are massive, luminous spheres of plasma held together by gravity and emit light and heat through nuclear reactions in their core. Stars are visible in the night sky because of the light they emit.
They don't. The stars are far beyond Earth's influence and are not affected by Earth. The "falling stars" you see in the sky are small pieces of rock burning up in the atmosphere properly called meteors. Neither the stars nor meteors are affected by people's deaths.
Pyrotechnicians refer to the individual chemical pellets that produce light and color in fireworks as "stars." These stars are combined in various configurations to create different effects in the sky during a fireworks display.
The Stars' Tennis Balls has 388 pages.
The Stars' Tennis Balls was created on 2000-09-29.
The ISBN of The Stars in the Bright Sky is 9780099461821.
The Stars in the Bright Sky was created in 2010.