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Why do stars twinkle?

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Answer: Atmosphere turbulence bends light

Distance makes light flickerWrong. Distance doesn't cause twinkling. Atmospheric turbulence does—moving air pockets of different temperatures/densities bend light differently, creating twinkle.

Space dust blocks starlightWrong. Dust can dim starlight, but twinkling comes from atmospheric turbulence—moving air with varying density randomly bending light paths.

Atmosphere turbulence bends lightCorrect! Twinkling (scintillation) occurs when starlight passes through Earth's turbulent atmosphere. Moving pockets of air with different temperatures and densities bend light slightly differently, causing rapid brightness/position changes. Planets don't twinkle much because they're closer—larger apparent size averages out the atmospheric effects. Astronomers build telescopes on mountains to reduce atmospheric turbulence!

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