Collinear stars are stars that line up straight, just like when you put blocks in a row on the floor.
Imagine you're playing with building blocks. You place one block, then another right next to it, and keep going, all in a straight line. That's what collinear stars look like from far away. They’re not necessarily close together; they could be spread out across space, but if you look at them, they seem to sit on an imaginary straight path.
Like friends lining up for a photo
Think of it like when your friends line up for a class picture. Even though they might be standing in different parts of the room, if they all stand along the same wall or line, they’re collinear, just like stars that seem to follow the same path across the sky.
Sometimes scientists use this idea to understand how far away stars are or how they move, it’s like using a straight line as a clue in a fun puzzle.
Examples
- Three stars in a straight line, like three dots on a ruler.
- Stars that are perfectly aligned in space.
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See also
- How Does All About... Stars Work?
- How Does Big Stars | How the Universe Works Work?
- How Does Every FIERCE Star Type Explained In 13 Minutes Work?
- What Actually 'Stars' & 'Planets' Are?
- How Does Stars 101 | National Geographic Work?