for another few million years
they stay out all day it just you cant see them in the day because of the sun light in the sky.
The time the sun stays in the sky varies depending on the time of year and your location. At the equator, day and night are roughly equal, while closer to the poles, the sun can stay in the sky for up to 24 hours during the summer months.
We're in it's sky, not the sun in ours. And we're in orbit around it.
The sun would always stay there, and never go
If you mean how long it is night time and/or a sun-less sky, then about 8-9 hours
The sun appears to stay still in the sky because Earth rotates on its axis. This rotation creates the illusion of the sun moving across the sky from east to west. In reality, the sun is always in motion, with Earth's rotation giving us the perception of a stationary sun.
The sun appears to stay still in our sky because of the Earth's rotation on its axis. The sun appears to rise in the east and set in the west due to the Earth spinning from west to east. The sun itself is constantly moving within the Milky Way galaxy, but from our perspective on Earth, it appears stationary.
As long as the sun is behind you in a clear patch of sky and the air in front of you is loaded with water droplets.
The length of a shadow in the evening depends on the position of the sun. In the evening, when the sun is lower in the sky, shadows tend to be longer than during midday when the sun is directly overhead.
about five minutes
around about 8 minutes before they get sun burnt
you can get a tan in any temperature you can endure, as long as the sun is out and high up in the sky.