no <><><> The first car did not have a roof at all.
Under the steering column, by the brake petal, the 2nd fuse box is located there. This contains the fuse for the moon roof.
Sun first, then the earth and moon formed at the same time around 4.65ga (billions of years ago) when a large moon-sized planet collided with the proto-earth/moon system.
The moon reflects the light of the sun that falls on it.
When you have a sun or moon roof installed, low cost shouldn't be your first consideration. The quality of the job is most important, as a cheap installation is more likely to develop leaks. Choose your installer carefully.
The sun formed first. The moon was not formed until around after the formation of proto-Earth.
None of the above, the Moon is a satellite of the Earth, not the Sun.
Without light from the sun, there would be no moonlight. But, without the moon, there would be no moonlight, too.So, the answer is that moonlight occurs when sun reflects off the surface of the moon.It's kind of like the question of which came first--the chicken or the egg. In this case, though, it can reasonably be said that moonlight originates with the sun; thus, it is caused by the sun.
The First Quarter moon is one quarter day behind the sun. So when the sun sets, that particular moon phase is nominally where the sun was at Noon ... due south in the northern hemisphere, due north in the southern hemisphere.
they created a nice atmosphere for the people who went to the theatre at night
Certainly. Their light came from the sun, the moon, the stars, and from fire.
Around 400 million years after the Big Bang, the first stars were formed, comprising of nothing but hydrogen and helium. No other elements existed (apart from small amounts of lithium). These stars created the first 26 elements up to iron via nucleosynthesis in the stars core, and due to the size of the stars, much more massive than stars today, they would explode in a supernova, creating all elements heavier than iron. So the star came first. Our Sun is a second but more than likely third generation star based on the metallicity of it's elements (i.e those metals created in earlier supernova explosions) So the Sun came second. Based around the Sun's initial creation, interstellar medium would collect around it and via accretion, coalesce to form the planets. During the formation of these planets a Mars sized planet collided with Earth ejecting enough material to form the Moon. So the Moon is third or last. ---------------------------------- Personally, I feel that the Stars came first as they are the main component of the Universe. (Although theoritcally, stars are suns from other galaxy's so the sun and stars is a chicken and egg situation) Then the sun hence the centre of a galaxy and finally the moon as it is the 'satellite' of the earth.