There is no one answer to that as we'd need to know your height and location and at what time of the year to give a precise answer. Generally, though, we can say that at high-noon in summer, your shadow will have minimal length as the sun is more directly above you. At high-noon in winter, your shadow will be longer as the sun is much lower in the sky than in summer. Your shadow is longest at sunrise and sunset and will shorten until high-noon after which it will lengthen.
There are different lengths of day and night depending on people's location. Some areas will have more light during the day and others will be darker.
the lengths and direction of shadows change during the day because of some factors these are: 1) position of the earth facing the sun 2) time of the day 3) power of suns rays 4) place object is in 5) what object is around
Because the sun moves across the sky (the world spins around it) The earth rotates around the sun causing different shadow lengths
A shadow is what changes during the day but always points away from the sun. The position of a shadow shifts as the sun moves across the sky, causing the direction of the shadow to also change throughout the day.
no
the position of the sun
The time of day in which you will hardly have any shadow is during 12:00PM or noon. This is because the sun is directly above you, casting little to no shadow.
The position and length of your shadow change throughout the day due to the angle of the sun in the sky. In the morning and evening when the sun is lower in the sky, your shadow will be longer. At midday when the sun is directly overhead, your shadow will be shorter.
You are a shadow. Shadows are formed when an object blocks light, creating a silhouette during the day, while disappearing when there is no light at night.
wind
when you move and when the sun angle changes
In the southern hemisphere, the shortest shadow during the day will point North