Nothing effects it.
The moon is still present in the sky even when you cannot see it. Its position changes based on its orbit around the Earth, and factors like its phase and time of day affect its visibility to observers on Earth.
whichever part you see
You can't. You just see it in different places.
The changing appearance of the moon is due to its orbit around the Earth. As the moon moves in its orbit, the angle between the sun, Earth, and moon changes, causing different portions of the moon to be illuminated and visible from Earth. This creates the phases of the moon that we see from Earth.
The moon orbits the earth. When you can not see it, it is on the other side of the earth. That happens once a day as the earth spins on its axis.
You always see the same side - as the moon takes the same time to orbit the earth as it does to rotate once on its axis !
The effect of the moon is werewolfs come out and howl
The sun's gravitational pull causes the moon to orbit around the Earth, resulting in the moon's phases as we see from Earth. The sun also illuminates the moon, causing it to appear bright in the sky as it reflects sunlight.
Because of the moon's orbit around Earth, and the Earth's rotation around the sun...
We only see one part of the Moon form the Earth because the Moon's orbit is tidally locked to the Earth. This means that the Moon rotates on its axis in exactly the same time as it takes for it to make one orbit round the Earth. This cause the same face of the Moon to be presented to us at all times.
In space. Comment: It's hard to disagree with that. The answer you need is that the Moon is between the Sun and Earth. The alignment isn't usually exact because the Moon's orbit is tilted relative to the Earth's orbit around the Sun. Incidentally, you can't actually see the Moon when it's New Moon.
In space. Comment: It's hard to disagree with that. The answer you need is that the Moon is between the Sun and Earth. The alignment isn't usually exact because the Moon's orbit is tilted relative to the Earth's orbit around the Sun. Incidentally, you can't actually see the Moon when it's New Moon.