That entirely depends on your latitude, but on the fall equinox, lets say for simplicity you are at 45 degrees N, then on the Fall equinox the sun would be 45 degrees above the souther horizon at noon. In the tropics the sun can be at the zenith (90 degrees overhead).
fall because the days are shorter making the sun not set up as fast as summer
Late spring, summer and early fall the sun appears high in the sky, late fall, winter and early spring, it appears to be low in the sky. this is caused by earth's tilting when orbiting around the sun and rotating on it's axis.
It shouldn't my friend did it and sat in the sun for 2 hours and it looked amazing
During the fall the sun will be at the same angles as experienced during the spring.
When the sun is in the east, shadows fall toward the west side of objects.
The planets will fall into the sun and get destroyed.
The planets will fall into the sun and get destroyed.
No, the sun is too bug to fall into the earth. The sun has used up approximately half of its life. In another 4 billion years or so, the sun will expand to become a red giant. When it does, the earth will be swallowed up by the sun.
The High Bright Sun was created in 1964.
Yes, there are two high tides and two low tides each day. The gravitational pull of the moon and the sun causes the water levels to rise and fall cyclically, resulting in daily high and low tides.
We feel HOT in after noon and pretty cool in morning because is noon rays of the sun are fall directly on earth surface whereas sun rays fall slantingly in Early morning
When the sun rises to begin the new day, night fall ceases.