What, exactly, did you see? - You can basically see anything for which you have line-of-sight, that is, if a straight line between the object and you doesn't go below the horizon.
I think the questioner may be mixing up the "celestial equator" and the Earth's equator.
The celestial equator is the "projection" of the Earth's equator onto the sky. It a great distance away, effectively at infinity.
Let's consider the difference between the two equators.
Normally, you can see only a few miles to the horizon, depending on your height above your surroundings. Obviously you can't see the Earth's
equator from the North Pole.
Things above ground such as airplane tracks can be seen when they are further away than the horizon, but still your visibility is limited by the Earth's surface.
However, from the North Pole, you can see as far south in the sky as the
celestial equator.
So, you could just about see a star in that part of the sky. The stars are light years away, of course.
Imagine you are near a distant star on the celestial equator. In theory, at that distance, you could see one full hemisphere of the Earth from pole to pole.
So, someone at the Earth's North Pole could see that star.
To sum up: it's because the stars are so far away that you can see a star
on the celestial equator from the North Pole.
There isn't a screamer for ymas. Their song the consequens has screaming in it but that is Sean smith from the blackout. Josh has also said that on the new record they will have oli Sykes from bring me the horizon and Winston from parkway drive on two separate tracks screaming
The duration of Wagon Tracks is 1.3 hours.
Mad Tracks was created on 2006-02-27.
You can download tracks on mx vs atv reflex by simply starting the application and then searching for tracks that you want.
France has more railway tracks than Belgium.
Yes, you don't have to play Phantom Hourglass and still understand Spirit Tracks.
Yes horizon treadmills are all variable speed and many offer incline options as well as programmable "tracks" which vary the speed and incline during a run.
Receding lines converge into vanishing points. If you stared at railroad tracks leading away from you, as they approached the horizon, they'd appear to meet. They disappear/converge into the vanishing point.
The meaning of each map symbol can vary depending on the map legend, but common symbols include roads, rivers, mountains, forests, buildings, parks, and airports. Each symbol on a map typically represents a specific geographic feature or location to help users navigate and understand the map more easily.
That's easy; a very high aircraft is less than 10 miles up, and can be seen for perhaps 50 miles. The Moon is 250 THOUSAND miles up (more or less; it varies) and the Sun is 93 MILLION miles away. The Moon, Sun, and other planets are enormous, when compared to an airplane. The stars; the nearest star is TRILLIONS of miles away, and most are much farther away than that.
It means that the person that dreamed it might be scared of train tracks or of trains! i really dont understand the question!! sorry
There isn't a screamer for ymas. Their song the consequens has screaming in it but that is Sean smith from the blackout. Josh has also said that on the new record they will have oli Sykes from bring me the horizon and Winston from parkway drive on two separate tracks screaming
lizard tracks are long and skinny, while frog tracks are short and wide.
When the artist uses linear perspective. It is a bit technical but is based on the way RR tracks look as they go into the distance, they seem to converge. There is a horizon line and a vanishing point that determine the angle of all items placed in the drawing.
yes they do have tracks!
There are no tracks on it until you put tracks on it.
Chris Stall has written: 'Animal tracks of Alaska' -- subject(s): Animal tracks, Identification 'Animal Tracks of the Pacific Northwest' 'Animal tracks of southern California' -- subject(s): Animal tracks, Birds, Mammals 'Animal tracks of the Rocky Mountains' -- subject(s): Animal tracks, Birds, Mammals 'Animal tracks of Texas' -- subject(s): Animal tracks, Identification