The answer is totally dependent on what their specialty is.
Plants and animals.
yes
Scientists get information from research, observations, experiments, and other scientists.
Scientists divide everything into a kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, and species to make identification easier when doing their research. The apple blossom belongs in the kingdom of plantae which simply means plant kingdom.
Scientists do that because they are skeptical about other scientists' work. They do not usually believe what other scientists have concluded, so other scientists come up with a hypothesis (or simply state a question) as to contradict, or theorize why another scientists' work and conclusions are wrong. In short: Scientists are skeptical and do not believe what another scientist has come up with as a conclusion.
Yes, scientists use star patterns to define celestial regions called constellations. These constellations help astronomers to navigate and locate objects in the night sky. By dividing the sky into sectors, astronomers can better organize and study the stars and other celestial objects.
no, they divide the sky into constellations
Divide the Blackened Sky was created on 2012-03-26.
why do scientists aew able to predict where in the night sky a planet will be visible
Galileo
Blue
on papaw
i dont know stupid
There are 88 official constellations recognized by the International Astronomical Union. These constellations cover the entire celestial sphere and are used as a way to divide the night sky for observational and navigational purposes.
eighty-eight constellation
Sky-scrap-er.
Temperature