telescope,.................................................................................................
To be more precise, you LOOK AT the sky.
stars are referred to as being in the sky, If you refer to the sky as everything that you see when you look up..then yes
Each constellation has billions, trillions, or more, stars, depending how powerful the telescope is that you use to observe. Remember that a constellation is basically a direction in the sky - so the farther you look, the more stars there will be.Each constellation has billions, trillions, or more, stars, depending how powerful the telescope is that you use to observe. Remember that a constellation is basically a direction in the sky - so the farther you look, the more stars there will be.Each constellation has billions, trillions, or more, stars, depending how powerful the telescope is that you use to observe. Remember that a constellation is basically a direction in the sky - so the farther you look, the more stars there will be.Each constellation has billions, trillions, or more, stars, depending how powerful the telescope is that you use to observe. Remember that a constellation is basically a direction in the sky - so the farther you look, the more stars there will be.
You look at where the sun is in the sky, E.g. if you wanted to be in the east you would look towards the sun (the sun rises in the east).
Stars, idiot.
No, the opposite. When the sky is darker the stars lookbrighter.
Planets but the look like stars
Yes, when we look at stars in the sky, we are seeing them as they were in the past because the light from stars takes time to travel to Earth, so we are seeing them as they appeared at a certain point in the past.
Because the earth is rotating thus creating the illusion that the stars are moving across the sky.
"The sky's stars seemed illuminated." The sky's blue.
The stars in the sky are very much like our Sun.
To see Saturn in the sky you can just use you're eyes. There is 2 stars in the sky that are REALLY bright. All you have to do is look at the smaller one. That's Saturn. Or you can just use a telescope.