In Delhi only 50-60 stars are visible just because there is a lot of pollution so the sky is full of dust and also because the Ozone layer protects the Earth with Atmosphere so maximum only 50-60 stars are visible.
All of them obviously! How else do you think they take showers??
No, in fact they are quite common. Many stars that, with the naked eye, look like a single star, are actually double or multiple stars.
how many times delhi was distroyed
No. Approximately 6000 stars can be seen with the naked eye, but there are many trillions of star out there that we can NOT see with the naked eye. Even the closest star after the Sun - Proxima Centauri - can't be seen without telescopes.
There was no army called Delhi army. Many Mughal rulers faught battle for Delhi.
Around 2500-5000 visible stars with the naked eye.
Depends on what the weather was like, where you were and what time of day it was.
No. There are roughly 5,000 stars visible to the naked eye.
It is very difficult to calculate the exact number.But it is approximately 3000.
There are many more people on earth than there are stars in the sky that are visible to the naked eye, even if you include all the stars that are ever visible from any spot on earth and not just the ones that you can see.However, if you include all the stars that we know about that are not visible to the naked eye, there are many more stars, by many orders of magnitude, than all the people who have ever lived on earth. It is possible that there are many more stars than the total number of human beings who will ever live at any time, past, present and future.
The big dipper has 7 visible stars. There are really 8 but only 7 can be seen with the naked eye :P
Among the visible stars, it's the one we have named 'Polaris'. But there are many stars closer to the north celestial pole that aren't bright enough to be seen with the naked eye.
Maybe from all stars, thousands of stars, in the galaxy.
The visibility of the stars in the night sky depends on the evenings weather conditions. More clouds = less visible stars.
A constellation is basically a general direction in the sky - you see a group of relatively bright stars, for example the Southern Cross in the shape of a cross, but any other stars in that direction are also said to be part of the Southern Cross - trillions of stars, most of them not visible with the naked eye.
As many as you like depending on how dim the stars are that you want to look for. Naked-eye stars, about 60 is my guess.
Any normal star bright enough to be seen with the naked eye as an individual star is in the Milky Way galaxy. A supernova in a nearby galaxy such as one of the Magellanic Clouds might be bright enough to be seen with the naked eye, but these are short-lived.