No because not everyone is in the same place and not all the star and constellation move. The Stars stay in the same spot. The only way it would move is if you move.
No, it does not
As of August 2014, Jupiter will not be visible in the night sky. It will reappear in September 2015 in the southern sky near the constellation Leo.
Stars in the night sky maintain the same distance from Earth. Despite their different distances from us, the stars appear to be at a fixed distance from each other when observed from our perspective on Earth.
Everywhere, in all directions, at every moment of the night, whenever the sun is down, the sky is clear, and you can see stars, you're seeing constellations. You just have to look at them often enough to recognize the patterns when you see them again.
No, the moon's position in the sky changes throughout the night due to its orbit around Earth. The moon rises and sets around 50 minutes later each day, so its position at a specific time will vary from night to night.
No. Look at the sky.
you look in the sky on a clear night
GREEN looks like money in the sky flying everywhere and landing on my hands! ;)
No, it does not
It's the same as the sky is brighter when the Sun is up, only not as much.
Yes. They are close to each other in the night sky. So if you know where to look you can see both of them.
The night.
The night.
Yes, when we look up at the night sky and see stars, we are actually seeing them as they were in the past due to the time it takes for their light to reach us.
it depends what you look for if you look for a planet you might want to head to a field on a cloudless night with no street lights
As of August 2014, Jupiter will not be visible in the night sky. It will reappear in September 2015 in the southern sky near the constellation Leo.
-- look in the sky, at least twice at different times of the same night, and compare the positions of the objects you see -- if you observe closely and recall the appearance of objects in the sky in reasonable detail, the change should be obvious within a half-hour