Full moon. Earth spins much faster than the moon moves so we all see a full moon as Earth turns us to see it.
I'm not exactly sure, but it could be Pluto. Like I said, not completely sure if I'm correct.
Yes, you can see it anywhere in the world from Earth. As long as its night but, it might be in a different position in the sky during the different seasons.
Well, the gravitational pull is an effect so if a body of water on Earth is closer to the moon, the tidal waves are higher than on the opposite side of the world. Hope that helps!
Tides are caused by the gravitational pull of the sun and the moon upon the oceans of the world. It matters not what phase the moon is in. It's gravitational pull is always the same. What matters is where it is in it's orbit of the earth. The tides are lowest when the sun and moon are on the opposite side of the earth, and are highest when the 2 are on the same side.
It takes 24 hours to go through a cycle of tides because the moon cause these tides and it takes a day to revolve around the earth.
The north and south pole are exactly on the other end of the world
The center of Arizona has approximate coordinates of 34.5 degrees north latitude, 112 degrees west longitude. The point exactly opposite on the earth is in the ocean off the southwest coast of Australia, about 180 miles west of the city of Augusta. A straight line from there to the center of Arizona passes through the center of the earth.
The Earth revolves around the Sun.
At the full moon, the Moon and the Sun are on approximately opposite sides of the world, with the Earth roughly in between them. If the Earth were EXACTLY in between them, we would have a total lunar eclipse. But at the full moon, the Moon is normally a couple of degrees above or below the line from the Sun to the Earth. Partial and penumbral lunar eclipses happen when the Earth is NOT QUITE exactly in between the Sun and the Moon.
no, but it has control such a marked effect on climatic elements as does the latitude, or the position of earth relative to the sun.- latitude is an imaginary line on the earth- its position on a world map is parallel.
It is at the opposite end of the world- as far from the equator as you can get.
America is the country on the opposite to India
The world is divided into Northern and Southern Hemispheres and Eastern and Western Hemispheres. If you are in England then the opposite side of the world is the Southern Hemisphere from one pole to the other or the Eastern Hemisphere from one side of the Earth to the other.
The 180th Meridian or 180° longitude is the exact opposite of the Prime Meridian.
No. The Prime Meridian is. The International Dateline nominally (but not exactly) follows the 180° meridian ... exactly opposite and half a world away from the Prime Meridian.
it changes every where over the world because when the world rotates the sun light is in a different position
No, it is the mass of the Earth that keeps it spinning steadily. The Earth is in free fall going round the Sun so it feels no force on it. The force is exactly balanced by acceleration towards the Sun. But because the Earth is big and the Sun relatively close, the point of Earth nearest the Sun (where the Sun is overhead) has a little more force than the centre, and twice as much as at the opposite point, and the difference is called a tidal force.