'Shadow circle' may be translated aså½±ã®ä¸¸ (kage no maru) in Japanese.
A sundial is a perfect example of using a shadow to tell the time during the day. As the Sun moves across the sky, the shadow cast by the sundial moves round in a circle, and the circle is marked in hours and minutes.
A full moon appears as a dark circle in the night sky on certain days, caused by the shadow of the Earth falling on it during a lunar eclipse.
What causes a shadow, to begin with. Yep, a shadow is the blocking of light falling onto a surface. If you don't have light shining on a surface to begin with, say, at night, you cannot have a shadow.
They are the penumbra (think of a large circle) and the umbra (think of a small, darker circle in the center of the large circle). People who have the penumbra only pass over them see a partial eclipse. People who have the umbra pass over them see a total eclipse.
It has 2 pointsA2. It IS NOT a parabola. It is an arc of a circle. As many mountaineers or plane flyers know by looking down on the top of clouds and seeing a perfect circle of rainbow light surrounding their shadow.
You may say 'maru.'
kageno masutaa
hayai kage
Kage no pansā
kage kitsune
Kage Senshi
Kage no suteppu
akai kage
'Death shadow' is死の影 (shi no kage) in Japanese, and may also be translated as 'shadow of death'.
(Shinpi-tekina kage)
The phrase 'night shadow' would be translated as 夜の影 (yoru no kage) in Japanese. This may also be used to mean 'shadow of the night'.
kage okami