The sky is the Earth's atmosphere.
It is not above you, you are in it.
No. The stars are far beyond any noticeable effects of Earth's gravity. The stars are also far larger and more massive than Earth is, so if Earth were ever to run into one it would be more accurate to say that Earth would fall into the star.
The sky is the same age as the earth
Mother Earth Father Sky was created in 1990.
Roughly speaking, a constellation is a direction in the sky. This is like asking "how far is left", or "how far is up". It starts right here, and goes all the way to infinity. Or however far the Universe reaches.
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.
The sky is the Earth's atmosphere.It is not above you, you are in it.
The sky isn't necessarily there, the blue factor of the sky is created when all of the Earth's water reflects off the sun, and bounces back to Earth. So the sky is kind of like a mirage: you can see it but its not really there. Therefor since it is not there, there is no distance from the Earth to the sky.
first of all thing considered, its ionosphere. and to the question it is 60000000 millimeters into the sky or 60 kilometers in the sky.
When you go 100 km above in the sky you are in the space.
No. While stars look tiny in the sky they are actually enormous, far larger than Earth.
The stars are too far away of Earth's gravity to have any noticeable effect on them.
No. The stars are well beyond the atmosphere and are not influence by Earth at all. The stars may look small in the sky but they are enormous, far larger than Earth and unimaginably far away.
as a home owner, how far into the grown do i own and how far into the sky do i have rights to?
the sky is part of our atmosphere which is in earth so it comes from earth
No. The stars are far beyond any noticeable effects of Earth's gravity. The stars are also far larger and more massive than Earth is, so if Earth were ever to run into one it would be more accurate to say that Earth would fall into the star.
No, afraid not. The nearest star ... in any direction ... is about 278,000 times as far away from earth as the sun is.
Constellations don't have a particular distance from Earth. This is because the stars only APPEAR to be a group in the sky. In fact they are all at different distances usually.