yes
If you stand at the South Pole, you see the sun set in the North. If you stand at the North Pole, you see the sun set in the South. If you stand anywhere else on Earth, you see the sun set in the West. To see the sun set in the East, you have to be off-planet, or travel very quickly from East to West. West
east is where the sun sorge, west is where the sun fall, north is the opposite of east and south is the opposite of west.
The Sun sets in the west, generally. Depending on the season, it may be a little south of west or a little north of west, but the Sun always sets in the west.
This is a yes and a no. No, the moon can provide good light for solar panels, but yes, since the way the moon shines is by the sun reflecting off of it.
To find your east and west horizons, you can use a compass, which indicates magnetic north; east will be to the right of north, while west will be to the left. Alternatively, you can observe the position of the sun: it rises in the east and sets in the west. If it's morning, face the sun, and your left will be north (west on your right). In the evening, the opposite applies as the sun sets.
The Sun sets in the West every day of the year. If you are referring to how far North or South of due West the Sun will set, it depends on whether you live North or South of the Equator, and how far you live from the Equator.
Britain is in the Northern hemisphere, and as such the sun rises in the east and sets in the west (or north-west in midsummer)
yes it does.
Because Uranus is covering the rest
from right to left, as the sun rises in the east and sets in the west.
no solar panels can't run out of electricity. this is because the sun provides there electricity but if the sun was to blow up then the solar panels would not work. no solar panels can't run out of electricity. this is because the sun provides there electricity but if the sun was to blow up then the solar panels would not work.
In general solar panels are not hot. when panels are heated by the sun rays panels get hot