Why do stars twinkle but planets don't?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Stars are point sources of light
Planets reflect more light — Wrong. The amount of light reflected doesn't determine whether an object twinkles. Both bright and dim planets show steady light compared to stars.
Stars are point sources of light ✓ — Correct! Stars appear as tiny points of light because they're so far away. Earth's atmosphere moves and bends this single point of light, making it twinkle. Planets are much closer, so they appear as small disks. Light from different parts of the disk averages out atmospheric distortion, creating steady light.
Planets have atmospheres — Wrong. Planetary atmospheres don't prevent twinkling from our perspective. The steadiness comes from planets appearing as disks rather than points, which averages out atmospheric effects.
More Astronomy & Space questions
- The Sun is cooler than the proton barrier suggests. Why does fusion still start?
- Earth's atmosphere slowly leaks to space. Which gas escapes fastest?
- Why is Earth's day getting slightly longer every century?
- Why was Earth's day stuck at 19.5 hours for 1.5 billion years?
- Why might several small units beat one giant Moon reactor?
- Why is fission likelier than fusion for first Moon bases?
