no
No, it does not
no
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.
Because the moon goes around the earth and around so it goes to the same place.
Same time it rises anywhere else in the world... different time every day.
No, it does not
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
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.
This would depend on your geographical location and the year. The temperature is not the same in every place in the world.Please ask the question again with the missing information (your location).
that would make an eclipse. so no
yes
That is based on the day of the year, and your location (and how far north or south of the equator you are located). This is a matter of almanac- records of repeating natural events. The sun will rise at the same hour every Feb 24th at a given spot. Records have been collected over the years, and repeat every year.
When you close a place down and you open that same place but in a different location.
no
It would still rise at a different time every day, the same as it does now.
No. It constantly changes, because it is always moving.