Approximately 4 minutes, every night
The big and the little dipper are each made up of many stars; each has a different life expentancy.The big and the little dipper are each made up of many stars; each has a different life expentancy.The big and the little dipper are each made up of many stars; each has a different life expentancy.The big and the little dipper are each made up of many stars; each has a different life expentancy.
Approximately 50 minutes.
Galaxies/nebulae are at the top of the tree; each one contains several billion stars. Each star might have many planets orbiting around it, and planets can have many moons.
50 one for each state There are as many start on the US flag as there are states. Each star represents a state.
A galaxy is a large system of stars, gas, dust, and dark matter held together by gravity. There are estimated to be billions of galaxies in the universe, each containing millions to trillions of stars. The exact number of galaxies and stars in the universe is still unknown due to the vastness of space and the limitations of current technology.
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.
Stars in the sky set about four minutes earlier each day, due to the Earth's rotation. This is because the Earth completes a full rotation approximately every 24 hours.
11 days earlier
4 and 5 stars
88
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.
Binary stars.
Sixty.