What Is a Shooting Star - Search
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  2. What causes a "falling star"? - NASA

    Meteors are commonly called falling stars or shooting stars. If any part of the meteoroid survives burning up and actually hits the Earth, that remaining bit is then called a meteorite. At certain times of year, you are likely to see a great number of meteors in the night sky.

  3. StarChild: Meteoroids - NASA

    Most meteors glow for only a few seconds prior to burning up before hitting the Earth's surface. On most dark nights, meteors can be seen. The chance of seeing a meteor with the unaided eye increases after midnight. People often refer to meteors as "falling" or "shooting" stars. The brightest of the meteors are called fireballs.

  4. StarChild: Comets - NASA

    The Oort Cloud is believed to surround our solar system and reach over halfway to the nearest star, Alpha Centauri, which is 150,000 astronomical units away. Scientists think that about 100 million comets orbit the Sun. A comet has a distinct center called a nucleus.

  5. Star Art - An Introduction to Myths of Different Cultures - NASA

    Star watching has occupied humans from the earliest times. Our ancestors studied the night sky and saw shapes and patterns among the stars. They often made up stories to explain what they saw. The same star constellation was seen very differently by people from different countries, or even different parts of the same country.

  6. StarChild: A Learning Center for Young Astronomers - NASA

    May 14, 2018 · StarChild is a learning center for young astronomers ages 5-13 to learn about the solar system, the Milky Way galaxy, and the universe beyond.

  7. What You'd See Watching a Total Eclipse - NASA

    Also visible during a total solar eclipse are colorful lights from the Sun's chromosphere and solar prominences shooting out through the Sun's atmosphere. When the total eclipse of the Sun is completed, the shadow of the Moon passes and sunlight appears once …

  8. How do we search for alien life in the universe? - NASA

    A search for signs of life in other parts of the universe is done by looking at the radio emissions of individual star systems. Each star in the system is examined for possible planets that may be orbiting the star. An advantage of the newly proposed Allen Telescope is that it can look at more than one star at a time.

  9. How long does it take to fly to Saturn? - NASA

    The nearest star (after our Sun, of course!) is Proxima Centauri at a distance of 4.2 light years. At a speed of 17 km/sec (such as what the Voyager 1 spacecraft currently has), it would take about 75,000 years to reach Proxima Centauri. This may explain why …

  10. Asteroids, Meteoroids, and Comets - NASA

    This activity can be used in conjunction with the StarChild Solar System Level 2 information. Objectives: ...

  11. What are constellations? - NASA

    In ancient times, people saw asterisms and made up all kinds of stories about mythological creatures and characters which they associated with the star patterns. As astronomers subsequently began to make maps of the stars, the named asterisms were included in the maps and called constellations.

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