That might mean that there has been a meteor shower. There are certain days of the year when Earth passes through what is believed to be debris of comets; as a result, you'll see several shooting stars on such days.
It doesn't matter which city or state you live in, they are all random. Shooting stars appear at night at any random time. You may see one shooting star in one night, or you may see fifty. If you are persistent to find one, you will find one eventualy. :)
Yes, shooting stars are real. I'm 16 and I've seen three in my life time. One from my porch and two from my friends back yard. Go out on a clear night when you can see the stars and be patient, you'll probably see one.
"Shooting stars" ("falling stars", "meteors") may be seen from any place on earth, on any night of the yearwhen the sky is clear and dark, if one has the patience to watch and wait.The best answer to the question is: "Every day."
There are shooting stars, but at one minute you look for one, and next you don't then it goes past you that fast you can't see it but some people can.
No one will ever know without visiting one but humans can't live on shooting stars.
Shooting stars are actually objects burning in the Earth's atmosphere. The name "shooting star" originates from ancient times (before advanced scientific investigation) when these burning meteors were though to actually be stars shooting across the night sky. Those that survive and crash onto the Earth's surface are then called meteorites.
Shooting stars happen every day. You just need to find a place with a nice dark sky and watch patiently. They happen more often later at night, after midnight is best. Also, there are times of year with "showers" in which they are much more common.
Shooting stars are not stars at all. They are tiny bits of debris, usually rock or dust. They completely burn up in our atmosphere (most of them) and so when you see one 'vanish', it is, in fact, gone.
Two reasons. One is that some times earth does not pass through regions of space with much debris, so there aren't many meteorites. The other is that city lights obscure our view of the night sky.
Yes, a larger one might do that - if you choose to include larger meteors in the category of "shooting stars".
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No one can give you a specific time. Shooting stars or meteors, are bits of debris that hit the atmosphere and burn. Timing is impossible, however, there are meteor showers where the probability is higher that they will occur.