Repeat question.
They would look the same as from earth since the stars are far enough away that the shifts would not be detectable by our eyes. Remember that Mars is only 50% further from the sun as the earth, so the shift would be about the same size as paralax measurements.
2006-10-19 06:18:22
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answer #1
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answered by mathematician 7
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As others have pointed out, Earth and Mars are close, compared with thedistances of stars.
However, since the atmosphere is much thinner, you'd probably see a lot more stars on Mars.
(Stars on Mars, I sound like Dr. Seuss!)
2006-10-19 18:51:40
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answer #2
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answered by tehabwa 7
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the stars themselves would be in the same positions, the only difference would be their "movement" across the sky. It depends on how different Mars' poles point vs. Earth's.
2006-10-19 13:57:40
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answer #3
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answered by kent_shakespear 7
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Well, they would not look like archers, goats, twins, scorpions, hunters, bears, etc, because these are not part of Martian mythology, or even biology. The stars might configure into quite different groupings, reflecting not only a different viewpoint but also different history and traditions.
2006-10-19 13:29:22
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answer #4
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answered by Sangmo 5
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The same. 20 million miles is nothing compared to a few hundred trillion.
2006-10-19 13:17:37
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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It would look the same, but maybe different cons. in the area
2006-10-19 13:36:08
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answer #6
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answered by Brunaa(: 2
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M&M's o:)
2006-10-22 17:55:38
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answer #7
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answered by HJW 7
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universe is same everywhere......
2006-10-19 13:17:38
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answer #8
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answered by mnilamani 1
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