The human eye has two different types of cell: cones for seeing color, and rods of seeing in low light. Since most stars do not provide us much light, we mostly see them with the rod cells in our eyes, which cannot detect color. It is possible to see the color of some stars, such as the red giant Betelgeuse.
Because stars are the one thing that you can see over great distances.
The stars that you would see at night in 6 months time.
Bright stars are rare, dim stars are common, so class M are the most common that we can see, but even dimmer ones are postulated to be even more common.
At the equator, you will see no circumpolar stars.
No, most stars you see are stars within our own galaxy, the Milky Way
The stars are always out just during the day you can't see them
Stars give out light energy, that is they are luminous. Thus we see them for the same reason we see a lighted torch bulb.
From stars.
Cities in general are bad places to see stars. You need to get out into the country, away from the city lights.
2011.........sucks right
all stars shine, its just a matter or whether or not we can see them
depends. when it get dark enough. sometimes its too cloudy so you wont see stars anyway.
Because the sun is brighter than stars
It is much closer than other stars. Most other stars you see today, are most likely already dead. As most stars you see are anywhere from thousands to billions of light-years away.
The light from the stars travels billions of years. Most of the stars we see are already gone, but the light from them us still traveling.
I don't think they do. At least, not if by "most stars" you mean "most stars you can see with the naked eye", for example. On the other hand, most stars actually ARE red, since red dwarves are in a majority; however, we can't see even the closest red dwarf with the naked eye.