The cloud fragment could be glowing due to a heavenly body which is behind it.
Because if an object is moving fast enough even the airflow around the object can heat it up until it glows.
calcium
No, the nuclear reactions are at the sun's core. It glows because the outer layers are at about 6000 degC and therefore it is incandescent
light sight
No, it is a red dwarf
meteor.
a colorful cloud of gas that glows because it is heated by light from nearby hot stars
Glows is the third person singular conjugation of the verb glow. The burner on the stove glows when hot.
Everything Glows was created in 2000.
There are lights inside it so when you turn it on it glows.
same ...
It all depends on how close stars are to the cloud, and how intense those stars radiate energy. A nebula will glow with a blue colour if it simply reflects starlight (the blue is from the same mechanism our sky is blue, from the scattering of light). This occurs when a nebula is too far from stars, or the stars are too cool to generate enough radiation to ionize the hydrogen. Nebula will glow red if they are close enough to stars to absorb energy - that energy is re-emitted by the nebula as red (from the ionization of the hydrogen, which then glows red).
Yes it glows yellow and some glows purple
The bulb glows continuously probably, because the circuit it is installed in, is in the closed position.
Because if an object is moving fast enough even the airflow around the object can heat it up until it glows.
it GLOWS!
if someone has been sick with silica poison, the gas that co Mes out of your buttocks glows gold!