At some time or the other, yes.
It doesn't rise all over the word at once. Sunrise is a line that proceeds round the word as the Earth rotates. When it is morning in London it is still deep night in New York.
Now. And now. And NOW. At every moment of the day, the Sun is rising on one part of the world, and it's setting on the other side of the Earth. Always.
sun rise in south Milwaukee wi usa He's been to restaurants all over the world, but never South Milwaukee.
All planets that rotate in our solar system will see apparent sun rise and sun set There are no planets that are stationary not to view the apparent sun rise and sun set.
I think that the sun in Franklin's quotation means that people all over the world need to realize that we the people need to rise and we can do that only if everyone as an union helps in,so if everyone pitches in then we wont fail but we will succeed.
the eart rotates on its axis so therefore all the world spins and sees the sun so its bright in the morning
The world would remain dark, plants wouldn't grow, we would die [we need sun], it would be cold, and eventually we would all die out.
Half of the world experiences night and half day this is because the sun is not all the way around the earth at one time. so basically no
Yes. Every place on Earth sees the Sun rise and set, yet not at the same time. Yes, the diamond of the point of Sunrise moves as the Earth moves; 24 hours, nonstop! Yes, every microsecond without interruption.
most believe it is the melting of the polar ice caps.
No, since our planet is spherical (ball-shaped) and we have only one sun, only half of the planet can be illuminated by the sun at any one time.
the rising of the sun is not the sun rising at all. It is actually the earth rotation that causes the sun to a pear to rise