Not necessarily, though it can imply that. On an otherwise clear night (no real cloud cover), few stars visible means a lot of haze or milkiness in the atmosphere. That implies a lot of water vapor, and further implies (does not guarantee) rain is on the way.
Not necessarily, though it can imply that. On an otherwise clear night (no real cloud cover), few stars visible means a lot of haze or milkiness in the atmosphere. That implies a lot of water vapor, and further implies (does not guarantee) rain is on the way.
The best true sample of the true members of different stars consists of
It does rain there but it is rare. There are a few areas that have not measured any rain since Europeans arrived in the 1500s. Other areas experience a few millimeters of rain on average. To say it never rains there is close but not quite true.
false
Yes. There is a common myth that the stars you see at night have burnt out in the millions of years it takes for their light to reach us.This is not true for two reasons.The stars you see at night are in usually no more than a few hundred light years away, so you see them as they were, at most, a few hundred years ago.Most stars last for billions of years, so a period of a few million years, let alone a few hundred, is not significant.
No. It is commonly stated that the light we see from the stars left them millions of years ago. This is not true. All of the stars you see in the night sky are, at most, a few hundred light years away. The closest of them, Alpha Centauri, is a little more than 4 light years away. So you see the stars as they were, at most, a few hundred years ago. A few hundred years is insignificant in the lifetime of a star.
This is only true for the Antofagasta Region in the Atacama Desert. There has been no rain recorded here in its' history.
The average number of stars in a dwarf galaxy since it contains a few million to several billion stars with as few as ten million (107) stars.
because they have teir own source of gravity and the are out of the earths atmosphere unlike rain drops. stars have built in gravity rain doesnt
A great resource is www.imdb.com (Internet Movie DataBase). Two movies are Rain Man and Singing in the Rain
No it is false........ Even there is thundering it continues to rain...
true