Has anyone ever seen the phenomenon of light connecting between the stars in the sky?

Updated on technology 2024-06-20
9 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Even different stars in the same constellation can differ by tens or even hundreds of light-years from each other, so it's unlikely that anything really connects the stars together. And to take a step back, even if there are some supernatural things that really connect certain stars together overnight, and these things are bright enough that our naked eyes can see them - because as I said before, the distance between different stars and us is different, and the difference may be tens or even hundreds of light years, and the light emitted by such a long line will take different time to reach our earth. If this connection exists for a short period of time (let's say a few days), what we see on Earth is likely to be just a small point of light, moving between several stars at a very slow pace.

    So, the line of stars you see can't really be the line between stars. As for what ...... is

    Since I have never seen this phenomenon myself, I can't give a definite one. Wish.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    I've seen a similar phenomenon and found someone who had the same experience as me, and I thought it was just a normal constellation, but now I can't find an explanation. I finally found someone who had gone through the same experience, tears, and I began to suspect that I had seen it wrong all these years.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    I've seen it, it's early in the morning, it seems like 2000 or 2002

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    I am today under the three stars in the middle of the constellation Orion, there is a small star and a star quite far away There is a ray of light in the middle, the naked eye is not clear, the afterglow is very clear, my friend and I both saw it,

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    I'm also, my dad said I was hallucinating, I used to search on the Internet to see what the connection between the stars is, and finally saw the same as me, when I was a child, I could clearly see the shallow and slightly bright line between the Orion constellations, and the Big Dipper was also connected, very clear, by no means an illusion, but now I can't see it.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    The diagram you posted is M31, the Great Nebula Andromeda, the one below is M110, the companion system of M31, and the one with a circle above is M32, which is another extragalactic galaxy much farther away. Except for these three big guys, the rest of the stars in the picture are all foreground stars, members of our galaxy, and "suns" of all sizes.

    There are five main categories of celestial light that enter our eyes:

    1.Stars, some of the stars emit visible light, and some of the dwarf stars emit only infrared light, which we can't see.

    2.Emission nebulae, bright nebulae that emit light by ultraviolet radiation from nearby hot stars, with emission lines of stars in the spectrum.

    3.Reflection nebulae, bright nebulae that shine by reflecting the light of nearby bright stars, and the spectrum contains the absorption lines of stars.

    4.Other non-luminous objects reflect the light of stars, such as planets, dwarf planets, asteroids, comets, and satellites (including sub-satellites) of planets

    5.Meteors, which burn and glow after entering an atmospheric planet due to friction.

    There are more than 200 billion stars in the Milky Way, and probably less than half of them emit light, and a large number of dwarf stars exist.

    There are two kinds of extragalactic galaxies (other galaxies you are talking about): one is elliptical galaxies, in which most of the stars are relatively small but all emit light; One is spiral galaxies (including barred spiral galaxies), which are similar to our Milky Way.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    1 Most of all the starlight reflected in our eyes is the reflection of the sun's light, and some are stars that shine on their own and do not reflect the sun's light.

    Each galaxy has a very massive celestial body, some of which emit light like the sun, and some of which are compressed into black holes because of too much mass and do not emit light.

    There are many extragalactic galaxies outside the Milky Way, and there are also many stars, and all stars shine like the sun.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Upstairs, it's basically wrong. Scientists have observed that the vast majority of stars are stars that will light up and do not need sunlight, if you know about these galaxies. And the time of the many stars of light, we can guess that the starlight may have been circulating in front of your eyes for hundreds of years.

    If we assume the light of the sun, the light of the sun, we can bake. Therefore, it is recommended that the landlord watch the CCTV 10 sets of documentaries, which are described in detail. I'm sure there will be a lot of help.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Other galaxies consist of celestial bodies similar to the sun, but we do not call them the sun, but stars.

    Stars emit light, planets don't, and the stars we see are partly stars that emit their own light and partly planets that reflect the sun's light.

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