No. In Antarctica, as everywhere else, the Sun rises in the east and sets in the west. It may be more north or south than east, but there is some easterly component to the sunrise, and some westerly component to the sunset.
West. This is due to Earth's rotation from west to east, causing the sun to appear to move across the sky and set in the western direction.
after it rains the sun try to come out but the moon is its shadow so that's why the sky turn pink.
its how the earth spins round the sun. Anonymous.
Antarctica.
The sun in Antarctica is the same sun that shines all over the earth. It's rise and set patterns, however, are polar, which makes those patterns different from the sunset/sunrise patterns that most humans are familiar with.
The cast of Why the Sun and the Moon Live in the Sky - 1981 includes: Spencer Shaw as Narrator
At the end of the day, just after the sun has set, before it becomes completely dark but there is no sun in the sky
The Sun doesn't: "move across the sky" Earth revolves around the Sun which is why it appears to "move across the sky".
There is no sun in Antarctica in June.
As the earth rotates the sun moves across the sky from east to west. A sundial is set with the marker faceing north; as the sun moves across the sky the shadow of the marker wil point at the approiate hour. (sundials do not work before sunrise or after sun set)
A full moon rises at sunset and sets at sunrise, appearing on the opposite side of the sky as the sun. This is because a full moon is directly opposite the sun in the sky.
maby a sun set or not