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Shooting star

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Shooting Star
Related Category: Astronomy: General
in astronomy: see meteor.
More on Shooting Star
Meteor - appearance of a small particle flying through space that interacts with the earth's upper atmosphere.

 


Shooting stars come from meteoroids, small pieces of material left over from the formation of the solar system, which are entering the earth's and burning up as they do. You can find out more on our web pages:
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I hope this helps! ...

Definition: shooting star: A meteor.
Space Tragedies9 Planets in Nine DaysAstronomy 101
Related Articles ...

Meteors - shooting stars
What is a Meteor?
Meteors, or shooting stars as they are more commonly known, are the streaka of light produced when a meteoroid burns up in the Earth's atmosphere.

A Meteor is the proper name for the streak of light that is usually called a shooting star. Meteors are caused when specks of dust about the size of grains of sand dash into the upper atmosphere from space.

Shooting Star or Fireball. Friction heats the rock plunging through Earth's atmosphere and makes the meteoroid glow in the air, causing the streak of light. The streak also is known as a shooting star or fireball.

Shooting Star
The streak of light in the sky produced by the firey entry of a meteoroid into the Earth's atmosphere; also the glowing meteoroid itself.

Shooting stars are not, of course, really stars. They are actually small bits of rock and metal that collide with Earth's upper atmosphere and, because of friction, burn up.

Shooting stars have nothing to do with stars whatsoever, and are small particles striking the Earth's atmosphere.
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shooting star
A common type of meteor, caused by objects as small as 1 mm in diameter
solar flare ...

Shooting star
A light in the atmosphere caused by a meteor falling towards the Earth.
Solar System ...

SHOOTING STAR
A shooting star is not a star; it is a meteor (made of rock and/or iron) which is burning up in the Earth's atmosphere.

A shooting star seen from a distance of 770 million kilometres - amazing! ...

A shooting star is not a star; it is a (made of rock and/or iron) which is burning up in the Earth's .

aka Shooting Star - Streaks of light made when meteoroids enter the Earth's atmosphere.
Meteorite
The frazzled remains of a meteoroid which has survived to the Earth's surface.

The shooting stars should appear to come from within the 'sickle' of the constellation Leo which rises around 23.00 local time.

Although shooting stars have been known since ancient times, they were not known to be an astronomical phenomenon until early in the 19th century.

Meteors - "Shooting Stars"
Calendar of southern meteor showers Brief notes about the showers A possible new meteor shower for mid September.

shooting star (NASA SP-7, 1965) = meteor. Shoran (NASA Thesaurus / NASA SP-7, 1965) (From short-range navigation).

Meteors, or "shooting stars," are bright streaks of light that flash across the sky as a meteoroid, a piece of interplanetary debris, enters Earth's atmosphere. If any of the meteoroid reaches the ground, it is called a meteorite.

Meteors are small particles, usually smaller than grains of sand, which travel through space: they become visible as ‘shooting stars' when they enter the Earth's atmosphere and burn up as a result of friction.

Blazing star, Double star, Multiple star, Shooting star, etc. See under Blazing, Double, etc. -- Nebulous star Astron., a small well-defined circular nebula, having a bright nucleus at its center like a star. -- Star anise Bot.

DODD, Thunderstones and Shooting Stars: The Meaning of Meteorites (1986); JOHN G.

METEOR (Gr. perEwpa, literally " things in the air," from yerb., beyond, and a€ipav, to lift up), a term originally applied by the ancient Greeks to many atmospheric phenomena - rainbows, halos, shooting stars, &c.

The Lyrid meteor showers offers up, on average, about 8 shooting stars per hour. This works out to about one shooting star every seven and a half minutes for morning observations.

The quick flashes of light in the sky most people call ``shooting stars'' are meteors---pieces of the rock glowing from friction with the atmosphere as they plunge toward the surface. Most of the meteors you see are about the size of a grain of sand.

A meteor shower, some of which are known as a "meteor storm", "meteor outburst", or "shooting star", is a celestial event where a group of meteors are observed to radiate from one point in the sky.

A "falling star" or a "shooting star" has nothing at all to do with a star! ...

Meteor, also called a shooting star, or falling star, streak of light in the sky that results when a particle or small chunk of stony or metallic matter enters the Earth's atmosphere and vaporizes.

We see them as meteors ("shooting stars" or "falling stars") when they enter Earth's atmosphere at tens of kilometers per second and burn up.

A meteor is the visible path of a meteoroid that enters the Earth's (or another body's) atmosphere, commonly called a shooting star or falling star.
Definitions ...

Also called "shooting stars", they travel across the sky in a very short time, from less than a second to several seconds, and they do so because they are only a matter of tens of miles above the surface of the earth.

Had Shakespeare lived in today's world - seeing streetlights as ubiquitious as the stars once were in his day - he might have penned, "solace in the shooting stars.

A meteor is a bright streak of light in the sky (a "shooting star" or a "falling star") produced by the entry of a small meteoroid into the Earth's atmosphere.

There are about eight "shooting stars" per hour every night, but your chances improve considerably during major meteor showers, such as the Perseids and Geminids. The Perseids peak the evening of Aug. 11 and the Geminids the evening of Dec. 13.

Most of the 20 tons or so of extraterrestrial materials that strike the atmosphere each day is in the form of tiny cometary dust grains that burn up as "shooting stars." Occasionally, a walnut to grapefruit size meteorite will fall.

They have been called many things over the years; shooting stars and falling stars are the most common names. Whatever name you want to call them by, there is plenty of information about meteor here on Universe Today.

How do Meteors become shooting stars?
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When a meteorite enters our atmosphere and becomes a "shooting star," it is no longer in an orbit. Some space probes, like Voyager, have reached escape velocity and broken away from the pull of the Sun's gravity.

A meteor is also known as a shooting star, though, of course, it has nothing to do with stars.

These are called meteors ("shooting stars"). Fireballs
Most meteors are tiny specks of dust and rapidly burn up in the atmosphere.

These are the "shooting stars" commonly seen at night. Some larger rocks survive their fiery descent to the surface; you can see some of these "meteorites" displayed in museums.

The visible path of a meteoroid that enters Earth Earth's atmosphere is called a meteor, or commonly a "shooting star" or "falling star"....
s.

Meteors are also called shooting stars or falling stars. The object that is falling is called a meteoroid. If the object survives its fall and reaches the surface of the Earth, it is called a meteorite.

A meteoroid which becomes visible upon entering the Earth's atmosphere is known as a meteor (or shooting star). Several meteors occurring within a few minutes of each other are called a meteor shower.

a flash of light that occurs when a meteoroid burns up in Earth's atmosphere; also popularly known as a shooting star
meteor shower ...

There were also records of comets as portents of calamities, and shooting stars that crossed the sky.

Solar system matter observable when it falls through Earth's atmosphere and is heated by friction to temporary incandescence; a "shooting star."
meteorite - (n.) ...

METEOR
A meteor is a meteoroid that has entered the Earth's atmosphere, usually making a fiery trail as it falls. It is sometimes called a shooting star. Most burn up before hitting the Earth.
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Meteor This term describes the bright streak of light caused by a meteoroid as it burns up in Earth's atmosphere. Other names for a meteor include "shooting star" and "falling star".

Common language does not always reflect this astronomical usage; the term "star" ordinarily does not include the Sun, and sometimes includes the visible planets and even meteors ("shooting stars" or "falling stars").

Meteor
A small particle of rock or dust that burns away in the Earth's atmosphere. Meteors are also referred to as shooting stars.

Meteors are usually called "shooting stars." They usually burnt up eventually. But for some massive ones, the remaining parts will hit the Earth surface, they are known as meteorites.

A sharp change in the pressure, temperature, and density of a fluid which develops when the velocity of the fluid begins to exceed the velocity of sound. [H76]
Shooting Star ...

With his hair streaming fire, the youth plunged like a shooting star into the Eridanus.

Shooting stars - Meteors.
Showers - When many meteors enter our atmosphere at once, or almost at once.
Spring tides - The tides of the ocean are at their highest when the earth, moon, and sun are in a line.

See also: Earth, Meteor, Atmosphere, Star, Sun