No the stars are not hidden in daylight.
You just can't see them because our star, the sun, is brighter. So it obscures the light from the other stars.
2007-03-02 09:06:03
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Brighter things (like the Sun) will block out dimmer things (like the stars). It's not like some magical blue curtain is lifted over the sky at day, it's just the Sun, and the way the Sun effects our atmosphere.
Some people don't even see stars at night, if they live in the city. City lights and other lights block out stars and make only the brightest stars and planets visible.
Try and notice the star visibility difference on a night with a Full Moon and a night with no Moon.
2007-03-02 07:29:46
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answer #2
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answered by Logan 5
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properly, to make this short and not in any respect bypass into too a lot element, the beginning of a movie star takes position even as a large cloud of interstellar dirt and gas coalesces on the middle. further and extra count number falls in in the route of the middle and the "center" of the cloud heats up. finally it receives so warm that a self-keeping nuclear fusion reaction takes position, and the movie star is born. The extremely lengthy reliable era in a movie star's existence is termed the significant sequence. finally, close to the top of its existence, a movie star will deplete maximum of its gas. For a movie star like our sunlight, this is going to enhance right into a pink significant movie star, and then this is going to blow off its outer layers and change right into a white dwarf. The white dwarf will slowly cool till it now no longer produces any mild. For a movie star a lot extra large then our sunlight, the movie star's center will give way as quickly because it thoroughly runs out of gas. This motives a giant explosion observed as a supernova. The remnant of the middle will change right into a neutron movie star or a black hollow. as far as rarity is going, there are 2 hundred-400 billion stars in our own galaxy, and an untold sum of galaxies contained in the universe. So this is likely no longer a uncommon prevalence, a minimum of on a cosmological timescale.
2016-11-27 00:34:11
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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The reason you cannot see the stars during the day time is because the sun emits such a bright glow on earth that the stars are blocked out.
2007-03-02 07:30:10
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answer #4
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answered by Lighting Bolt 7 2
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no you could not see them due to sunlight. You know some of the stars may be already burnt out even we could see their lights, because sometimes it takes millions of year to travel the light form a star to earth. Good question
2007-03-02 07:28:25
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answer #5
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answered by baniban2000 3
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No but the sun is so bright we cant see them (u no like when u drive with a lot of lights on)
2007-03-02 07:22:57
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answer #6
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answered by bestscienceteacherever 1
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therre hidden because of the daylite n sun
2007-03-02 07:26:18
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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no, they move to the other side of the Earth just like the moon does.
2007-03-02 07:30:39
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answer #8
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answered by Dwayne 2
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They are still there but they are obscured by ambient light,
2007-03-02 07:47:35
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answer #9
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answered by Billy Butthead 7
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they are still there, but with the sunlight we can't see them. hidden by sunlight, if you will. :)
2007-03-02 07:26:19
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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