about 4 min.
Wherever you see a star tonight ... rising, setting, or anywhere in between ... it will be at the same place slightly earlier tomorrow night ... on the average, ( 3 minutes56.5 seconds ) earlier.
There are four red stars with five points each on the New Zealand flag, representing the Southern Cross constellation.
There are three stars on the Philippines flag, each representing the three main geographical regions of the country: Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao.
There is no "star alpha". Alpha is PART of the name of many stars - basically one for each constellation.
False. They appear to be together because they are all in the same direction as we look towards them, but many are very far away from each other.
Stars set roughly 4 minutes earlier each day due to Earth's rotation. This is because the Earth completes one full rotation about its axis every 24 hours, causing the apparent movement of the stars across the sky.
Wherever you see a star tonight ... rising, setting, or anywhere in between ... it will be at the same place slightly earlier tomorrow night ... on the average, ( 3 minutes56.5 seconds ) earlier.
4 and 5 stars
88
you are too early by 1 hour 3 minutes.
Australia has 7 stars. One for each state.
There are 50 stars, one for each state.
50 stars, one for each state.
About 3 to 5 minutes
There are 50 stars on the US flag, one for every state.
Sixty.
Binary stars.