well, it doesn't really move. the earth is tilting either away, or twards the sun a it is evolving/ rotating around the sun. that is why we have night and day. sorry if you are religious.
hello children of the earth i am slitheen not blathereen, i coming for you sarah jane
The less a star appears to move, the farther it is from Earth. Stars that do not appear to move are very far away from Earth, making their apparent motion negligible from our perspective due to the vast distances involved in space.
In this context, the sky doesn't move, but the earth rotates creating the illusion that the sky moves (unless you mean clouds which is a different issue altogether.). The sky appears to move from east to west.
The moon appears in different places on successive nights because the Moon orbits around the Earth once every 27.3 days. Each night it appears about 13 degrees further east among the background stars than the previous night.
The stars usually don't move much, but earth moves a lot. Since star are in view from the earth at any sight direction, the earth rotating, and revolving gets the earth viewing different parts of space from different places. It moves gradually, so the star seem to move.
No, it appears to move that way because of the earth's rotation.
1 megameter = 1000000 meters The decimal point appears to move six places.
it doe not the earth rotates on its own axis and the sun appears to move in the sky when its actually the earth
False. The sun appears to move across the sky during the day due to the Earth's rotation on its axis, not its revolution around the sun. Earth's rotation causes different parts of the planet to face the sun at different times, resulting in the daily cycle of sunlight and darkness.
It appears to move because it is a moving object and you are observing it from Earth.
because the earth is spinning and as it spins the sun appears to move.
No, the sun does not move westwards around the Earth. From our perspective on Earth, it appears as though the sun moves across the sky from east to west due to the Earth's rotation on its axis. In reality, the sun appears to move because of our planet's rotation, not because it is moving around the Earth.