No. There are roughly 5,000 stars visible to the naked eye.
Not that many are visible. Out in a desert far away from light-pollution, you can see a one or two thousand, max. Less with the naked eye.
Thousands - about 4,000 if you have a clear night and no light pollution.
Because if there is no wind you can see stars in the puddle provided it's dark, and it has to be a clear night as well . .
Clear nights offer the best opportunities to see the stars, but a clear,cloudless night will often be much colder than a night with overcast conditions. This is because the clouds insulate the surface, and reflect energy back. A clear night will allow the surface heat to escape into space more easily and so it will be colder.
False. Only the most massive stars will become black holes.
You can see the faint edge of the Milky Way, our galaxy. It is not a sharp edge, but appears as an indistinct band across the night sky. That is how it got its name. The cloudy appearance of the Milky Way is actually the effect of the billions of stars that are gathered near each other in our disc-like galaxy.
some stars.
they come out at night.
they come out at night.
Interference from Earth's atmosphere.
look in the sky at night. The clearer the sky the more stars you see. Go to the country side and in a clear night there are lots and lots of stars!
The symbol for clear skies during the day is a sun. The symbol for clear skies at night is a set of stars.
A clear night is ideal for viewing the stars.
A clear night and normal eyesight.
There is no perfect day. All you need is a clear night.
On a clear night you can easily study the stars whereas on a cloudy night it is quite difficult.
They are always out We only see them when its pacific or eastern time night when the sky is clear
Yes, easily, on any clear night.