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No..they were NOT planes!!!! Too high...too fast!

2006-07-25 02:06:38 · 11 answers · asked by swtdee32 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

11 answers

You are definitely seeing satellites. There are thousands of them up there and you can easily see several each evening, if you just look. The space station is one that is especially bright and easy to see. NASA has a web site that will tell you when it will pass over your location.

2006-07-25 02:20:17 · answer #1 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 2 0

That was a satellite, as other people have said. Stars "move" across the sky at night, but its slow, like the sun moving across the sky during the day seems slow. If you went out a 9PM and came back out again at 3PM, you'd see that the stars had moved.

This is because of the Earth's rotation, just as the sun moving across the sky is because of the Earth's rotation. As mentioned above, stars also move in their position in the galaxy. You wouldn't notice this doing naked-eye observing as much as you would notice the fact that there are new stars and constellations visible at that time of night and some which were previously visible are no longer. If you used the right techniques, you might however, notice the stars motions, after all it was discovered by people. As it is, the motion is very different and would look different than the nightly movement across the sky. But it is cool and the story of how they discovered it is very interesting and important in the history of modern astronomy.

2006-07-25 02:57:27 · answer #2 · answered by astronwritingthinkingprayingrnns 2 · 0 0

Of course the stars move, the Earth moves, the Sun (which is a star) moves... its all a matter of relative motion... The galaxies move about the Universe, the Stars move about in their galaxies, and Planets, comets, asteroids and all other celestial bodies move. The reason the stars don't seem to move is that they are so far from us that even large motions seem like no motion from Earth.

"Shooting stars" are actually meteorites entering and burning up at the edge of Earth's atmosphere... If you saw a "moving star" it was most likely a satellite or even the ISS (international space station)

However, from our perspective on Earth, there is no way you could have noticed an actual star moving across the night sky.

2006-07-25 02:22:58 · answer #3 · answered by AresIV 4 · 0 0

Yes stars do move. There are several aspects to the movement of stars. First there's the radial velocity of a star..... the velocity of either recession (away from the Earth) or approach (towards the Earth) of a star. Next is a star's proper motion......i.e. it's motion with respect to the background stars....also known as line of sight motion, where the star appears to move across the sky against the stars behind it. Then there's a star's true space motion, or what direction and velocity the star is actually moving in its orbit about the Galaxy.

2006-07-25 02:24:43 · answer #4 · answered by ozzie35au 3 · 0 0

The stars move revolving round the galaxies central point. But this cannot be seen with our eyes in any case. What you saw could be spy planes or high-altitude aircraft used for weather sensing. It could also be an UFO(doews not have enough proof(it could be anyhting else.)It could also be a meteor burning up in the atmosphere..

2006-07-25 02:19:38 · answer #5 · answered by Neo 1 · 0 0

Prolly Alien Ships Or Artificial Satelleites

2006-07-25 02:15:32 · answer #6 · answered by savvy s 2 · 0 0

You may have seen a satellite. It is fairly common to see them, they appear to be a star, but move across the sky in one direction at a fairly constant speed.

2006-07-25 02:12:14 · answer #7 · answered by mmenaquale 2 · 0 0

I choose that the term “taking photos celebrity” exchange into taken out of the vocabulary. It comes from a time while human beings did no longer be attentive to that stars are trillions of miles away and are suns, on a similar time as taking photos stars are merely meteoroids, frequently merely grain length, burning up interior the ambience, in line with risk basically 30 miles up. All meteors which you notice are falling into Earth, merely the comparable as something down here falls to Earth. you notice them in a depressing sky and because at 30 miles you have no intensity ingenious and prescient, you have no way of discerning no count if a streak is going up or down. surely they're all coming down (of course), yet while a meteor enters the ambience interior the decrease component to the sky, and in the past it burns out it travels extremely in the direction of you, it seems as no count if that's traveling upwards. Watch an airplane concepts-set your region from low interior the horizon. extraordinarily at evening, once you merely see the navigation lights, the attitude of its concepts-set makes it look like that's traveling up into the sky, on a similar time as surely it must be coming down progressively for concepts-set. It’s the comparable ingredient. Get medical. there is no such ingredient as a “taking photos celebrity”.

2016-11-02 23:13:59 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

shooting stars aren't really stars. But stars don't move (at least not in a manner that's detectable by the naked eye), perhaps you saw a comet?

2006-07-25 02:13:39 · answer #9 · answered by John C. 3 · 0 0

Could've been the International Space Station. Not sure if it's visible from Earth, though. Or it could've been any of hundreds of artificial satellites that are orbiting Earth.

2006-07-25 03:12:49 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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