Essentially yes, the sun always rises in the east and sets in the west.
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.
The higher the Sun is in the sky, the shorter the shadows produced. In some places the Sun can be overhead at certain times of year. In that case no significant shadows are seen.
The Moon is new tonight; it rose about when the Sun did, and will set about when the Sun does. Tomorrow evening, you may - perhaps - see a sliver of a crescent Moon low in the western sky at sunset.
The sun rises at different times depending on what country that you may live in. During the summer, the sun will rise earlier and will set later.
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.
no
For the same reason that the Sun and the Moon rise and set. That's the result of Earth's rotation.
The sun appears to rise and set due to Earth's rotation on its axis, not its position in the sky. The sun reaches its highest point in the sky at noon, known as solar noon, which varies depending on your location on Earth. The height of the sun in the sky affects the intensity of sunlight and weather conditions.
Equator
its how the earth spins round the sun. Anonymous.
yes
Essentially yes, the sun always rises in the east and sets in the west.
If it rises at all, it will be generally towards the east.
East It moves from East to west across the sky
the sun spins around the earth. I don't think Copernicus would agree. The answer is, of course, that the Earth spins and so the Sun seems to rise in the sky after the dark of night.
No. The sun is the bright yellow thing in the sky. The moon is the big white thing in the sky.