nope
The stars that are spaced less than your latitude from the celestial pole never set.
about 4 min.
Stars that are within an angle from the pole of the sky that's equal to your latitude don't rise or set, and are always in your sky.
Those are called "circumpular" stars. Exactly which stars are circumpolar depends on your location. For example, if you live 30° south of the equator, all stars that are up to 30° from the south pole of the sky will never set.
how did the stars get in the sky the stars got in the sky by a famous person her nickname was STELLA with the water gun she shot the stars in the sky and that is how the stars got in the sky you'll have 1000 dollars sent to your door if you can name her real name.
They are always visible in the sky. (Unless it's cloudy). They don't "rise" and "set" at the latitudes where they are circumpolar.
For the same reason that the Sun and the Moon rise and set. That's the result of Earth's rotation.
he flies with the stars in the sky and he cant survive without those stars anymore so true are you copying are you plese do well this is your answer
Yes, the movement of the stars across the sky as opposed to the movement of the sun across the sky is what has set up the sidereal day.
Every natural object in the sky appears to rise in the east and set in the west.
Nothing seen in the sky from a point on the Equator is "circumpolar", meaning that everything in the sky appears to rise and set.