The symbol indicates that this is a Revenue Share question. You can earn money for charity by answering it now! This month we are donating Revenue Share Answer Revenues to the American Red Cross.
  1. Become an Experts123 Paid Contributor.
  2. Answer this question accurately and thoroughly.
  3. Earn revenue while your answer is ranked #1!
×
Q:

Why are stars in photographs like long streaks?

2
Like
Answer
Comment
Flag
Thanks for your feedback!
A:

1 Answer

rank
1
Like
Comment
Flag
We observe the heavens from the surface of the spinning Earth. As the Earth spins, our view changes slightly every second. Every few moments a star shifts its position in the sky. It takes time to gather Enough light to photograph a star. In the time needed to make the exposure, the star has moved. It leaves a streak of light on the photographic p1ate. Big telescopes are set with tracers that move them to keep pace with the their camera equipment will rotating Earth. They can fix on a distant star and/photograph it as a bright dots when a telescopic camera is photographing a comet, it is focused on a nearby object. The background moves during the exposure and the distant stars look like long streaks rather than dots of light.  more

Related Videos

Add your answer...

Top Related Experts

1.
Kiril Kirilov
News expert · Articles · 0 Likes

Top Answerers

1.
vanity fair
7 Answers in the past week
2.
Robert Turner
4 Answers in the past week
3.
jacob kind
3 Answers in the past week

Top Askers

1.
Deitty smith
3 Questions in the past week
2.
Charles McAtee
2 Questions in the past week
3.
Frank Bell
2 Questions in the past week

Top Supporters

1.
Tom Wagner
9 Likes given in the past week
2.
Rachel Kellen Gill
3 Likes given in the past week
3.
Nancy Hayden
2 Likes given in the past week
...