December Winner: Markulous and Year Winner: Wild Canon

Congratulations to Markulous on winning the final competition of 2009 and Wild Canon on winning the overall competition for the year!

The top 3 members this year were:

1st - Wild Canon (80 votes)
2nd - Markulous (40 votes)
3rd - Keith (33 votes)

Congratuations to all three of you and also a big thanks to everyone who entered this year. If you'd like to know your score then please contact Jamie.

As you know, this was Jamie's last month running the competition so a huge thank you to him from everyone at the forum. He's run the competition brilliantly and I'm sure you'll agree it's been a big success.

There will be no January competition this year but hopefully we should have something sorted for February.

Thanks and happy new year!



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Why do stars twinkle
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Squirreler
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Why do stars twinkle

Sorry to ask such a basic question! I've always wondered why if stars are just other suns, why to they twinkle, because our sun doesn't? I'm sure there is an obvious answer, but I would really like to know!

This post was last modified: 11-06-2008 05:36 PM by Xeract.

10-06-2008 03:49 PM
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Dave Perry
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RE: What do stars twinkle

[font=Courier][color=#FFA500]Stars twinkle because they are a very very long distance away and the amount of light arriving here is very very small. As it passes through our atmosphere this light gets distorted & interrupted. This causes the light to appear to be twinkling.

If you were outside the atmosphere then there would be no distortion and the stars do not twinkle. (Ask an astronaut)

Any weak light source at night on earth can also appear to twinkle. If you've watched city lights from long distances away, perhaps on a plane at night, the weaker lights do appear to twinkle also for the same reason.

As for the sun, no amount of atmosphere can cause a visible twinkling effect because it is obviously much too bright to be effected.

This post was last modified: 11-06-2008 05:27 PM by Dave Perry.

11-06-2008 05:26 PM
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Bill
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RE: Why do stars twinkle

Dave's exactly right. It's the atmosphere that causes the distortion, but the stars don't actually twinkle really.

16-06-2008 09:15 PM
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Les
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RE: Why do stars twinkle

HI All,
As already mentioned turbulance in the atmosphere causes the stars light to be scattered and distorted.Twinkling is most often noticable in frosty winter nights with rising air currents from the ground.Lower stars are worst effected as they shine through a thicker wedge of the Earths atmosphere, usually the bright stars overhead twinkle much less.Because stars are so far away they appear as pinpoints making them suseptable to twinkling,however the planets which although at first glance appear starlike are in fact tiny discs(often resolvable even with binoculars)and most often shine with a steady light even when all the true stars around them are twinkling like mad!From British latitudes the most famous 'twinkler' is the winter star Sirius it appears as the brightest star in the entire sky it doesnt rise far above the southern horizon from here so it not only twinkles but appears to flicker violently through blues,reds white and even greens ,a marvalous sight on a frosty winters evening.Icon_cool
Regards Les

This post was last modified: 17-06-2008 10:48 PM by Les.

17-06-2008 10:46 PM
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GreenLarry
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RE: Why do stars twinkle

As everyone has said they don't really twinkle. Its the atmosphere that causes the scintillation. If you were in Space they would appear constant. Its also one way of distinguishing between a star and a planet. Planets don't twinkle but appear as a constant bright light. In fact Jupiter is quite visible at night now in the south east.


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22-07-2009 05:25 PM
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jenny21
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RE: Why do stars twinkle

I think I prefered it when I thought they did. First Santa Claus doesn't exist and now stars don't really twinkle. I don't think I can take much more.


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11-08-2009 03:42 PM
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