time would go backwards like at 2:00 in the afternoon it would be 2:00 a colck in the morning
The most imortant part of the eye that changes the direction of light is the LENS, though the cornea does do a little of the inital focusing.
Because of Earth's rotation.
Because of Earth's rotation.
The earth orbiting the sun and the tilt in the earth's axis or rotation.
Say for example, you are currently at point A on the surface of the earth. As the earth rotates, point A will eventually be on the side of the earth facing away from the sun, resulting in darkness. It always spins in the same direction, hence the sun always rises in the East and sets in the West. The reason we have moonlight is because light is reflected off of the moon. In short, if I've understood your question correctly, yes, the changes in light are due to the rotation of the earth.
The coriolis effect
It means that the direction of an axis of rotation changes over time.
Cooling remains same irrespective of the motor rotational direction.
Of course it changes. For example, at some point it is moving in one direction; half a cycle later it is moving in the opposite direction.
When one variable changes, the other variable moves in the opposite direction.
Force changes either the speed or the direction of motion, or both.
Any force that is not canceled by an equal opposite force.
Wind blows from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure. Changes in wind direction would be a result in changes in air pressure due to factors such as altitude and temperature. Another thing that changes the direction of the wind is known as the coriolis effect, which causes winds in each hemisphere to curve. This effect is a result of Earth's rotation.
The ball's momentum changes in one direction, the momentum of planet Earth in the opposite direction.
yaw rotation is a movement around the yaw axis of a rigid body that changes the direction it is pointing, to the left or right of its direction of motion.
opposite in direction to the change produced by the initial stimulus
emits radio wave photon.