Want this question answered?
january
That's not necessarily true. It depends on the viewpoint of the observer - and the direction the meteors are travelling through the atmosphere.
If you can see the solar eclipse, then you are in the Moon's shadow.
An observer on the surface of Venus during the daytime would see a thick layer of clouds covering the entire sky. These clouds are composed of sulfuric acid and reflect most of the sunlight that reaches Venus back into space, creating a bright and hazy atmosphere. The observer would not be able to see the Sun or any other celestial objects due to the dense cloud cover.
An astronaut on the Moon - or any of the Moon residents, starting about 30 years from now - would see a solar eclipse where we here on Earth see a lunar eclipse.
Full, large or whole. Maybe the question was meant to be...How would the Earth appear to an observer on the moon during a full moon?
appearing!ROFLgo to yahoo...maybe they know
During the Moon's revolution, an observer in space would see the moon, but would not be able to see it spin around. From far to the north, about the solar system, the moon would appear to make a squiggly
january
GOD.
Yes. Unless the observer was on the back side of the moon, or on the opposite side of the earth from the moon, he/she could see the same phases that we see here on earth.
There is a sudden movement in the earths crust in an earthquake. However, lava does not appear
suck my dick happen
That's not necessarily true. It depends on the viewpoint of the observer - and the direction the meteors are travelling through the atmosphere.
The rotation of the Earth makes the stars appear to move in a circle, as viewed from the observer's position. The stars are always there, it is just that we can't see them during daylight.
The Boston Observer was a paper printed during the American Revolution. The paper began as one sympathetic to the Whig causes.
massage and movement during the childbearing experience were and continue to be a prominent part of many cultures' health care.