Hi guys.. My shooting stars disappear right in front of me, when I'm about to collect them.. I am maaad. Btw, I arrive quickly and it's still night time, and yeah I always see that Farosh dragon lutking around xD

Shooting stars look like stars that quickly shoot across the sky, but they are not stars. A shooting star is really a small piece of rock or dust that hits Earth's atmosphere from space. It moves so fast that it heats up and glows as it moves through the atmosphere. Shooting stars are actually what astronomers call meteors. Most meteors burn up in the atmosphere before they reach the ground. However, once in a while a meteor is large enough than some of it survives and reaches Earth's surface. Then it is called a meteorite.


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"Shooting stars" and "falling stars" are both names that describe meteors -- streaks of light across the night sky caused by small bits of interplanetary rock and debris called meteoroids vaporizing high in Earth's upper atmosphere. Traveling at tens of thousands of miles an hour, meteoroids quickly ignite from the searing friction with the atmosphere, 30 to 80 miles above the ground. Almost all are destroyed in this process; the rare few that survive and hit the ground are known as meteorites.

Once you have settled at your observing spot, lie back or position yourself so the horizon appears at the edge of your peripheral vision, with the stars and sky filling your field of view. Meteors will instantly grab your attention as they streak by.

Meteor showers appear when crumbs of dust (meteoroids) from asteroids or comets enter Earth's atmosphere at very high speeds. During their journey through the atmosphere, meteors rub against air particles, creating friction and heat. The heat then vaporizes most meteors, resulting in bright streaks of light across the sky, or shooting stars.

Depending on where the trail of particles falls in a particular year, meteor showers can be spectacular, or a total bust. The moon can also play a significant role in the visibility of a meteor shower, with a bright full moon outshining fainter meteors and a new moon providing dark skies ideal for shooting star hunters.

Orionids: The Orionid meteor shower produces meteors from Halley's comet, which orbits the sun every 75 to 76 years. The Orionid shower happens every October and can last for a week, treating patient observers to a show of 50 to 70 shooting stars per hour at its peak.

Last night, August 10 is officially known in Italy as la Notte di San Lorenzo or the Night of the Shooting Stars. This is because, apparently, if there are clear skies, one can see many shooting stars. I always thought this was very poetic but somewhat of a myth. Until I went sailing in the Mediterranean years ago on August 10. I saw tens of shooting stars and it was indeed magical. I have no idea why this is the case, from a scientific point of view, but effectively everyone in Italy looks to the sky on this evening to make a wish on a shooting star. I have been told that they are also out on August 11. Last night was rainy and foggy where I am so I saw no stars. Maybe tonight.

On every world, a shooting star will fall at a random spot selected from a predetermined list roughly 90 minutes (with a variation of up to 15 minutes), although stars on different worlds may fall closer in time to one another, or even at the same time.

Players will receive stardust as they mine the crashed star, receiving 32 experience each time a piece of stardust is mined. A roll for mining stardust is performed regularly based on the player's Mining level, scaling from 29% to 46% at levels 1 to 99. Mining enhancers that multiply yield do not work on crashed stars.

Sunday, December 31

Jupiter ends the month standing stationary against the stars of Aries at 10 A.M. EST. This ends its retrograde loop; now the gas giant will begin moving east. The bright planet is visible all evening, rising before the Sun sets and setting around 2 A.M. local time. By an hour after sunset, it stands some 50 high in the southeast, above the magnitude 2.5 star Mekar in Cetus.

Shooting stars are a group of herbaceous perennials in the primula family (Primulaceae). There are over a dozen species in the genus Dodecatheon, all native to North America. The most widespread and common one is D. meadia (sometimes classified as Primula meadia), variously called shooting star, eastern shooting star, American cowslip, roosterheads, or prairie pointers.

I would like to be able to view the night sky with no labels and no shooting stars but can't. I've set the shooting stars to "no shooting stars" but they still appear and some of these labels all the time as in attached image. What am I doing wrong?

Thanks.

OK, this is a week for a cosmic spectacle. The Geminid meteor shower has been lighting up the night skies. At its peak, which continues through tonight, stargazers can see dozens of shooting stars each hour. While most meteor showers are made up of icy and dusty comet particles, Kelly Beatty at Sky and Telescope magazine tells WBUR'S Here and Now that Geminids are different.

In the 1920s, Hollywood studios discovered the importance of amplifying performers' presence, popularity and money-earning potential by making them "stars." The photograph was one of the main elements used in the image-generating process. 17dc91bb1f

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