No. Sometimes (in summer, if you live in the northern hemisphere) it is further north; in winter it is further south.
Same way as the Earth, since they move together.
Opposition
Same as most other places - from the north or northwest, most likely...maybe west as well.
Obviously. Since they move in an ellipse around the Earth (or other central body), they change direction all the time. The only way NOT to change direction would be to move in a straight line; satellites don't do that.
Yes. Generally atomic radii turn to decrease as you move across the periodic table from left to right. this is because the nuclear charge increases as you move right across the period but the electron screening remains the same. consequently, the protons in the nucleus has a greater pull on the electrons.
Same way as the Earth, since they move together.
Yes, as long as you can commute to the school everyday and you are still in the same country.
The answers are not the same dude!
The energy of the valence shell remains the same.
The patterns appear the same because the stars are so far away that their movement is not apparent to our eyes. They move across the sky because the earth is rotating and that makes it look like the stars are moving. Just like the sun does not move across the sky, the earth rotates and the sun appears to move, the same is with the stars.
They are a in the same pattern.
They are a in the same pattern.
They are a in the same pattern.
They can only move across one plane
Examples of fractals in everyday life would be for example a fern. A fern is a type of leaf with a certain pattern. This pattern is the fractal because as you zoom in on the fern the pattern remains the same. It is the same thing over and over again no matter how far you look into it. This happens because of the fractal dimension.
There is no pattern, but you should do it the same way you do it with any vehicle...work by tightening one lug, then do the one across from it, then the one across from that, etc...the idea is to get an even pressure.
Electron shells