The stars visible from earth (except the sun) represent stars from the size of our sun to supergiants. How "big" they look to us is as much or more a function of their distance from us as it is their size. With good vision, on a clear night, the faintest stars we can see are about fifth magnitude. With a 70 mm telescope, that jumps to about 9th magnitude.
Nope, the stars are just as big when you see them from space as when you see them from Earth.
Stars emit light that travels to the Earth.
stars created light with s big bang and thats how the earth was made
The stars from the Big Dipper are approximately 80 light years away from Earth, meaning it takes 80 years for the light from those stars to reach us. This means that the light we see today from the Big Dipper actually left those stars 80 years ago.
The same stars as you can see when you stand on the Earth, but more clearly.
The night side of the Earth.
close by bright stars
Yes, we see it as differen because it is so close and therefore big in the sky. It is one of numerous of stars and not even a particularly big one at that.
The Earth is in the Milky Way Galaxy. We can see stars at night, so yes.
the stars don't move the earth rotates and that's why we think we see the stars move
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No, different parts of the Earth see different stars at the same time due to the Earth's rotation. As the Earth rotates, it changes the view of the night sky depending on the observer's location. The stars visible from a particular location depend on factors such as latitude and time of year.