Yes. You can see it different times a year and/or month.
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In mid-April 2010, Venus is visible low on the horizon in the west right after sunset. In fact, Venus is so bright that you can probably see it just before sunset.
If you are above the atmosphere you will see thick, opaque yellowish clouds of sulfuric acid.
Should you be foolish enough to go to the surface you would probably see volcanoes erupting through the dry desertscape interspersed with slab-like rocks and huge craters (at least 3 km across) . You would probably also see, occasional lightning. The winds move slowly but due to the extremely thick atmosphere they have enough force that you would see them blowing dust and rocks across the surface. Of course you would not be watching all this for very long because the high temperature (more than 462 °C- hot enough to melt lead) and high pressure (92 atm - around 1350 psi - a pressure equivalent to that at a depth of around 900 meters beneath the surface of Earth's ocean) you would be watching as you were simultaneously cooked and crushed - assuming the sulfuric acid in the atmosphere hadn't already dissolved you.
If you were standing on the moon, you could see the sun unless you were standing on the night side of the moon or on the moon during a lunar eclipse..
No. You would see a dull reddish glow, but not the actual Sun.
Yes you would
because of the atmosphere
No, you wouldn't. The phases of the moon we see from earth depend on the fact that the sun lights different sides of it, though only one side of the moon always faces earth. The key is that we are looking at the way the sun lights the moon's surface from here on earth. From the sun, we'd see a moon that was constantly being lit, and lit from right where we were looking at it from, if that makes sense. No "darker" phases would ever appear. Whatever side of the moon faced us on the sun, the sun would light it up. And we'd always see that fully illuminated side.
The sun lights the moon and how much sun is on the moon depends on the sun,That iswhy you can see moon phases.
sun gives the light to the moon sun gives the light to the moon
The new Moon "phase" is when the Moon is (more or less) in front of the Sun. We cannot normally see the Moon in this phase. If the Moon is exactly in front of the Sun, the Moon covers the Sun and we see a solar eclipse.
We see the moon because it reflects the sun's light.
No, you wouldn't. The phases of the moon we see from earth depend on the fact that the sun lights different sides of it, though only one side of the moon always faces earth. The key is that we are looking at the way the sun lights the moon's surface from here on earth. From the sun, we'd see a moon that was constantly being lit, and lit from right where we were looking at it from, if that makes sense. No "darker" phases would ever appear. Whatever side of the moon faced us on the sun, the sun would light it up. And we'd always see that fully illuminated side.
In the same way we see brightness from the Moon as a result of the Sun shining on it, you would see brightness on the Earth from the Moon when the Sun is shining on it. You would not be able to see normal lights, like street lights, from the Moon.
The same thing that happens when you're on eartlh and you see a solar eclipse. The sun disappears for a few minutes or seconds and comes back. On earth, it would be called a lunar eclipse, where the earth comes between the sun and the moon. On the moon, it would look like a solar eclipse.
The moon is gravitationally bound to the earth.If the sun weren't there to illuminate it, the moon would continue to accompany the earthwherever we went, but we couldn't see it.
the sun forguve moon and the lived hapilly ever after
The sun lights the moon and how much sun is on the moon depends on the sun,That iswhy you can see moon phases.
At new moon, the Moon is right next to the Sun - that is, you see it in the same direction, more or less. At new moon, the Moon rises together with the Sun.
the sun forguve moon and the lived hapilly ever after
We see light (from the sun) reflected off the moon. That's how we see almost everything! In an eclipse of the earth we would not see the moon as it would be in our shadow.
We can see the sun and the moon because when Aston outs givbe the moon the satallitte you can see it
If you could compare the sun to the size of a penny, an electronic microscope would be needed to see the moon.
Yes, in that case we would see it as a new moon.