Stars, even the closest one, are lightyears away from us. When you see a "falling or shooting star" you are really seeing a piece of debris burning up through our atmosphere. Stars can be more massive then our sun so if one "fell from the sky" life and possible earth itself would be gone. Hope thats what you were asking.
2007-01-05 04:47:38
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Stars will not fall from the sky. Observed from earth, there may be slight movement of a star, over millions of years.
Meterorites which is small space debris, when it falls into earths atmosphere, burns up, and is called a "shooting star", when viewed at night. But that is not a real star.
The size of a star will determine how it will finally die. Our SUN will eventually expand out past the orbit of the earth before contracting again.
"Stars, even the closest ones, are lightyears away from us"
- forum-snowboarder99 seems to have forgotten our SUN is a star, and is the closest one to us.
2007-01-05 13:54:51
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answer #2
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answered by srrl_ferroequinologist 3
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Most things in the Universe are 'falling', e.g. the moon is falling, but because it is also moving in other ways, it does not hit the Earth.
Earth's gravity is quite insignificant with respect to getting any stars to collide with Earth.
Our own sun may well swell up and burn out all life on Earth before some star or galaxy comes our way, by chance.
Lots of galaxies do collide.
2007-01-05 13:01:04
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answer #3
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answered by Sciman 6
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Stars are size of our sun have u Sean any fall???
2007-01-05 16:07:17
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answer #4
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answered by JOHNNIE B 7
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No. That is just one of many scientific impossibilities contained in the Bible.
2007-01-05 15:03:12
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answer #5
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answered by The answer guy 3
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No, it can colapse on itself and create a black hole or it can go supernova and explode.
2007-01-05 12:46:56
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answer #6
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answered by Rorshach4u 3
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no
2007-01-05 17:21:54
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answer #7
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answered by TITANS FAN 4
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