No, it does not
No and no. The moon rises at intervals separated by approximately 25 hours. Sometimes it rises at night, sometime it rises during the day. It always rises "in the east", but the precise location varies: sometimes it's further north, sometimes further south.
Each night the moon rise changes, So.... If you go to timeanddate.com, you can select a location in the drop-down menu and see times for moonrise and moonset in that location. Also provided is local time when the Moon passes the meridian with distance, fraction of the Moon illuminated and moon phase.
At some stage in every lunar month the moon will rise in the morning. Only when it is almost new/very old, you might not see it rise or set because it is almost in line with the sun.
Each night the moon rise changes, So.... If you go to timeanddate.com, you can select a location in the drop-down menu and see times for moonrise and moonset in that location. Also provided is local time when the Moon passes the meridian with distance, fraction of the Moon illuminated and moon phase.
The moon doesn't technically "rise" in the sky. It is circling the Earth. This is why each night it is in a different spot in the sky.
The moon does not rise at the same location every night. Even if it did, it would not be purposeful, it would just be the way it is.
No. Moonrise can occur day or night. The moon is not related to the sun at all. Since our way of measuring time is relative to the sun, the moon does not rise at the same time every time.
yes
No and no. The moon rises at intervals separated by approximately 25 hours. Sometimes it rises at night, sometime it rises during the day. It always rises "in the east", but the precise location varies: sometimes it's further north, sometimes further south.
Each night the moon rise changes, So.... If you go to timeanddate.com, you can select a location in the drop-down menu and see times for moonrise and moonset in that location. Also provided is local time when the Moon passes the meridian with distance, fraction of the Moon illuminated and moon phase.
No. Depending on the phase of the moon, it can either rise at night or during the day. When it is a new moon it cannot be seen at all because the sun is behind it. If the sun is directly behind it and lined up then it is called a solar eclipse.
At some stage in every lunar month the moon will rise in the morning. Only when it is almost new/very old, you might not see it rise or set because it is almost in line with the sun.
The Moon orbits the Earth. As a result, it rises about 50 minutes later every day.
The moon doesn't always rise at night. It rises and sets once in every period of about 24hours 50minutes. In the course of 29.5 days, it rises and sets as often, and is visible as much, in daylight as during the nights.
Often times no. The moon doesn't really rise, it has its own orbit around the Earth so some times it rises when expected, other times it doesn't.
The moon will rise roughly 45 to 50 minutes after the sun, for every day that has passed since New Moon.
The moon doesn't technically "rise" in the sky. It is circling the Earth. This is why each night it is in a different spot in the sky.