Stars do not blink. They appear to blink, or twinkle, because of disturbances in earth's atmosphere. That is one reason observatories are usually built at high elevations. The thinner the atmosphere, the less likely that disturbances will degrade images.
stars look like there blinking because they are constantly exploding.
Star doesn't blink but they appears to blink when light from the furthest star get reflected variably from our atmosphere
A blink at someone
blink many times
A blink at someone
We know it by observing that the stars blink in the sky while planets do not blink.
A blinking mass found in the sky could be a star, planet, satellite, or aircraft. Stars can appear to twinkle or blink due to atmospheric turbulence, while satellites and aircraft may blink due to reflecting sunlight as they move across the sky. Planets generally do not blink or twinkle like stars.
It's a Porn Star She's on the album Cover
A neutron star that "blinks on and off" is called a pulsar. They don't really blink, but there is a jet or jets of energy that come off some of these stars. Think of a light house. You see the beam "blink" but it's just that the beam crosses your line of sight.
A pulsar
meet the barkers
Blink Blink was created in 2001.
The future tense of "blink" is "will blink." For example, "I will blink my eyes."