Science, asked by abhineet90, 1 year ago

why does pole star appear to be stationary in the sky

Answers

Answered by gauravyoutuber
2
HERE IS ANSWER FRIEND


Polaris, the North Star, appears stationary in the sky because it is positioned close to the line of Earth's axis projected into space. As such, it is the only bright star whose position relative to a rotating Earth does not change. All other stars appear to move opposite to the Earth's rotation beneath them.

At the North Pole, Polaris would appear directly overhead with the other stars circling around it during the course of a night. As you move south, away from the Pole, Polaris would appear further down in the northern sky but still be at the center of daily stellar motions around it.


HOPE IT HELPS YOU

khallmark: i'm sorry I'll go to the next question
gauravyoutuber: Even I tried to provide you best content to him not like you not so silly answers.
khallmark: look I just made my account so i don't know much about brainly so if I'm gonna reanswer, I need ur help.
gauravyoutuber: Yes babes
gauravyoutuber: Tu maderchod
khallmark: also i'm a dude not a dudette.
gauravyoutuber: Tu chutieahai mujhe pata hai liken ager tu kuch bola to tu bhanchod and maderchod
Answered by jaydip1118
0

\rm\underline\bold{Answer \purple{\huge{\checkmark}}}

The pole star is located above the earth's axis which makes it to stay stationary for a viewer on Earth

Similar questions