Planet earth spins clockwise, just like the sun rises every day in the east, the stars do too as a result of that.
If you are located anywhere on earth that's more than 23.5 degrees from the equator, then the sun can never appear at your zenith. If you're anywhere within 23.5 degrees of the equator, then the sun will appear at your zenith, or very close to it, twice each year.
If you want to get technically precise, then for a single observer who stays putin the same place, it would be a very rare occurrence. But you can be sure thatthe moon is precisely at the zenith for a point somewhereon the equator every13.7 days.
Not necessarily. If something brittle were to crash into something hard, it would shatter before it could pass through. On a related note, however, there is a small but non-zero chance that something can pass through something else through quantum tunneling.
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The equator passes through Africa, South America, and Asia. The Prime Meridian passes through Europe and Africa. The Tropics of Capricorn and Cancer pass through Africa, Australia, South America, and Asia.
No, not all stars pass through the zenith. The zenith is the point directly overhead an observer, so stars that are close to the celestial pole (North or South) may not pass through the zenith at all from certain locations on Earth. Stars near the celestial equator are more likely to pass through the zenith as they appear to move across the sky.
If you are located anywhere on earth that's more than 23.5 degrees from the equator, then the sun can never appear at your zenith. If you're anywhere within 23.5 degrees of the equator, then the sun will appear at your zenith, or very close to it, twice each year.
That depends on your latitude. Also, it does NOT depend on the season. If a star passes near the zenith in Summer, it will also pass near the Zenith in Winter, although it may not be visible in one season or the other (when it passes near the Zenith during the daytime).
A person would have to visit the equator for the celestial equator to pass through your zenith or one would have to be at the south pole for the south celestial pole to be at your zenith. You would not see this, but you could note it.
That isn't possible. If you are at one of the tropics (23.5 degrees north or south of the equator), then the Sun will pass the zenith at noon, during a solstice. But in both cases (north versus south), that would happen at the SUMMER solstice.
If you want to get technically precise, then for a single observer who stays putin the same place, it would be a very rare occurrence. But you can be sure thatthe moon is precisely at the zenith for a point somewhereon the equator every13.7 days.
These all pass within 5 degrees of the zenith: Hamal (Alpha Arieties), Aldebaran (Alpha Tauri), Algieba (Gamma Leonis), Arcturus (Alpha Bootis), There are other fainter ones as well
Stars 'twinkle', planets do not. This is due to the proximity of planets, the light from which does not pass through so much dust and vary accordingly.
you have to pass each level with a amount of two or more stars.
a galaxy cluster is started but stars pass by each other but they dont go boom
its call superposition
It has 8. Each passes through the centre. Four pass through vertices, four pass through the mid-points of opposite sides