No, but it looks like its moving 'cause the earth is spinning.
Yes. Stars move themselves independently in space. Our own sun in fact is also moving through our Milky Way Galaxy.
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Yes, the movement of the stars across the sky as opposed to the movement of the sun across the sky is what has set up the sidereal day.
No, the big dipper (or Ursa Major) is not in the area of the sky that the planets move through. All of the planets, sun and moon are more or less on the same plane, so they all move in the same east/west line across the sky. Ursa Major is more to the north.
No, the sun both spins, and moves with the rotation of the Milky Way. Additionally, it move through space with the galaxy.
The sun doesn't move through the sky. The Earth is held by the Sun's gravitational pull and orbits the Sun while spinning.This is why it looks like the Sun is moving through the sky.
The sun is not moving the earth is
the sun does move in the sky
Yes because stars move so they would move through the night sky!!!! If you were to watch a constellation, it would appear to move through the sky but really the Earth's rotation and revolution about the Sun gives the appearance of the stars moving.
The Sun doesn't: "move across the sky" Earth revolves around the Sun which is why it appears to "move across the sky".
From east to west.
the sun dosent move across the sky
The Sun had a tendency to move through the sky on an East to West axis .So, apparently the sun no longer moves east to west through the sky. I have a tendency to be pedantic on semantics.
The Sun appears to move in the sky because we are on the Earth, which rotates once every 24 hours.
The ecliptic.
Ellen Kim was the first to explain why the sun and stars move across the sky in 1858
Yes. Stars move themselves independently in space. Our own sun in fact is also moving through our Milky Way Galaxy.