They twinkle due to air, not specifically oxygen. If there is no air, they won't twinkle.
Stars in the universe twinkle because of refraction not gravity.
No.
Stars shine steadily, but the atmosphere distorts the point image so that it appears to "twinkle". Planets are not point-sources; they actually have a tiny-but-visible disk. So the atmospheric turbulence doesn't cause planets to twinkle nearly as much.
Stars twinkle because of turbulence in Earth's atmosphere. As light from a star passes through the atmosphere, it gets distorted by varying air temperatures and densities. This causes the star's light to appear to flicker or twinkle when viewed from the ground.
Im sorry but there is no song that explains the life cycles of stars but u can find a song that has something to do with it like twinkle twinkle little star or something like that.....
twinkle twinkle little stars? twinkle twinkle little stars?
Stars in the universe twinkle because of refraction not gravity.
NO!
It was twinkle twinkle little stars
It's not really a nursery rhyme, but a song, "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star".
This is because the Earth's atmosphere has many layers which causes the rays of light coming from the stars to refract. This gives the effect that stars twinkle. The air around the moon does not have layers so the rays from the stars do not refract, and thus do not twinkle.
No. Stars twinkle on Earth because the light beams have to enter the atmosphere, altering the brightness of the star by the second. Since the moon really doesn't have a atmosphere, stars seen from there wouldn't twinkle.
Planet: No twinkle Star: Shimmer and twinkle
because when the light enters the atmosphere it goes in zigzags or long dot zigzags
Because they twinkle.
No.
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