A calender
No. Ancient peoples attributed patterns to the stars.
It is the human curiosity of what may lay beyond the stars.
The first people to study the stars were ancient civilizations such as the Babylonians, Egyptians, and Greeks. They observed the night sky and developed early forms of astronomy to understand celestial events and their significance.
At dusk the sky looks blue behind the stars. In fact the sky is within 100 km while the stars are light-years away.
When a star dies, it can leave behind different types of stellar remnants depending on its mass. Some examples include white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes. White dwarfs are formed from the remnants of low to medium mass stars, neutron stars are formed from the remnants of massive stars, and black holes are formed from the remnants of the most massive stars.
No. The most massive stars will leave behind a black hole.
No. Blue stars will generally leave behind neutron stars or black holes.
The sun, the stars.
To predict the weather.
Not all stars that undergo a supernova explosion will leave behind a neutron star. Depending on the mass of the star, the remnants could be a neutron star, a black hole, or in some cases, nothing at all if the explosion completely obliterates the star.
They used them to help them find their direction.
Historical people that looked at the stars and objects in the sky
The ancient Greeks believed that every day, Apollo, the god of the sun, would ride a chariot a across the sky, pulling the sun behind him.
No. Ancient peoples attributed patterns to the stars.
Babylonians
Ancient people saw the stars to navigate their position like the North Star.Ancient people looked at how bright the stars were to verify their location of the Earth's orbit.
It is a collection of stars which appeared to the ancient people to look like Orion the Hunter.