Hmm well if a star is moving, then i do not believe it is a star dude. If it doesn't light up til it gets close it's definitely not a star, lol
Because at nighttime there are no stars or large sources of light close enough to the Earth to light it up, like the Sun in the daytime.
Stars give out light. The sun is a relatively small star but it's a a lot close than the others making it appear bigger. Stars are explosions and give out light.
Stars are pretty much the light from stars that died. The light is a supernova and the stars are so far away that it takes a long time for the light to reach us. Once the light reaches us, we won't see that star anymore. If you went up to the "star" there wouldn't be anything there. The light is still traveling toward us, but the star is gone.
Burns and the sun makes stars light up as the light is reflected........
That happens when the individual stars are too faint, and too close together, to be seen as individual stars.
Stars generate light by nuclear fusion. That happens in their cores, but the outer layers glow with it.
because the light from the sun is so close to us and so bright it blocks out the light from the other stars. The only time you can see light from other stars during the day is during a solar eclipse.
No, constellations are imaginary patterns of stars.
The heat and light emitted from stars is due to the nuclear fusion within their cores. Stars are so massive that their gravity crushes atoms so close together that their nuclei begin to snap together, releasing loads of energy in the form of light.
False, they are not...some of them can be many, many light years apart!
Stars are mainly made up of Hydrogen and Helium. What makes them heat up and light up is the Hydrogen and Helium rapidly bouncing around in the star and hitting each other and combining, eventually creating the heat and the light.
From the light of the stars that make up the galaxy.