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The NASA Star Finder charts are constructed based on the visible night sky at 34° N latitude, about as far north of the equator...Asked by Vixine
The NASA Star Finder charts are constructed based on the visible night sky at 34° N latitude, about as far north of the equator as Los Angeles, California. Will the constellations on the Star Finder chart shift in the sky if you observe the night sky from further south?(1 point)
Responses
Yes, they will shift south.
Yes, they will shift south.
No, the location of the stars in the sky is fixed
No, the location of the stars in the sky is fixed
No, the motion of Earth cancels out with the motions of stars.
No, the motion of Earth cancels out with the motions of stars.
Yes, they will shift north.
Responses
Yes, they will shift south.
Yes, they will shift south.
No, the location of the stars in the sky is fixed
No, the location of the stars in the sky is fixed
No, the motion of Earth cancels out with the motions of stars.
No, the motion of Earth cancels out with the motions of stars.
Yes, they will shift north.
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Answered by
GPT-4o mini
Yes, they will shift south.
When observing the night sky from further south than 34° N latitude, the constellations will appear higher in the sky compared to how they appear from the northern latitude.
When observing the night sky from further south than 34° N latitude, the constellations will appear higher in the sky compared to how they appear from the northern latitude.
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