Are they always exactly as they are with us rotating, wobbling and orbiting? No they shift position day and night just like the sun and moon setting and rising. Yes they appear to not move much as the minutes or1-2 hours go by. But in all Timelapse I’ve ever seen, they set and rise and are moved feet/degrees, or side/position depending on season, this way and that as our earth moves. They do not sit stable in 1 spot all night every night.
You and I are also very very tiny compared to the Earth. We are but a single 1/2 grain of sand on a 30 mile long sandy beach, if using one for size comparison. And our view is only a tiny fraction of the whole sky. And by relative perspective, things outside our atmosphere don’t appear to move much because we only see a similar view for only so long before our lives are over. Orion’s Belt is no longer over the pyramids of Egypt. But it was directly over head when they were built and that’s a fact.
Watch Intersteller and listen closely to what they discuss about gravity wells, and time. That easily explains why things outside our atmosphere appear to not move much, compared to human lifetimes.
Are they always exactly as they are with us rotating, wobbling and orbiting? No they shift position day and night just like the sun and moon setting and rising. Yes they appear to not move much as the minutes or1-2 hours go by. But in all Timelapse I’ve ever seen, they set and rise and are moved feet/degrees, or side/position depending on season, this way and that as our earth moves. They do not sit stable in 1 spot all night every night.
You and I are also very very tiny compared to the Earth. We are but a single 1/2 grain of sand on a 30 mile long sandy beach, if using one for size comparison. And our view is only a tiny fraction of the whole sky. And by relative perspective, things outside our atmosphere don’t appear to move much because we only see a similar view for only so long before our lives are over. Orion’s Belt is no longer over the pyramids of Egypt. But it was directly over head when they were built and that’s a fact.
Watch Intersteller and listen closely to what they discuss about gravity wells, and time. That easily explains why things outside our atmosphere appear to not move much, compared to human lifetimes.