Physics, asked by anshu6827, 10 months ago

why do stars twinkle​

Answers

Answered by siddiquiarsalan766
1

Answer:

The stars twinkle in the night sky because of the effects of our atmosphere. When starlight enters our atmosphere it is affected by winds in the atmosphere and by areas with different temperatures and densities. This causes the light from the star to twinkle when seen from the ground.

Explanation:

MARK BRAINLIEST.

Answered by tomsterBG
1

Answer:

Stars are too far.

Explanation:

If you install stellarium (a cosmic prgram) then skip to night time you will see the exact same effect because sky objects that we actually don't see are blocking the sunlight. Our sun brings the light to earth in 8 minutes with average of 330000 km/h right? So we see everything that happens on sun but with a delay of 8 minutes: the closest galaxy to ours is Andromeda and its really far far away and the most stars that you can see actually don't belong to that galaxy. Stair at the Polar star to see how it twinkles and then look at the full moon (its actually brand new moon these days and it will become full after about 15 days) so you can see clouds that sometimes block the light. It's the exact same effect with stars: cosmic items block the light and stars usually do bubbly explosions too that are like little bubbles which make the lightning change trajectory since lightning goes straight. Hope that helped

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