the effect is the solar eclipse
Fancy boy
Venus and Mars
When the Earth is between the Moon and the Sun you get a full moon, not a new Moon which occurs when the Moon is between the Earth and the Sun. You could also get a Lunar eclipse.
The sun can sometimes be behind the moon, it depends on where the moon, earth and sun are relative to each other.
The Sun is NEVER between the Earth and the Moon. When the Moon is between the Earth and the Sun, this is called a Solar Eclipse. When the Earth is between the Moon and the Sun, this is called a Lunar Eclipse.
When the Earth is between the Sun and the Moon, it is a Full Moon but when the Sun, Moon and Earth are directly in line - we will get a lunar eclipse.
The distance from Earth to the sun is much greater than from Earth to the moon. It is not possible that the sun would be between Earth and the moon.
When the Moon is between the Earth and the Sun, it is in its new moon phase. From Earth, the side of the Moon facing us appears dark as the illuminated side is facing away from us towards the Sun. This alignment is known as a solar eclipse when the Moon blocks the Sun partially or completely as seen from Earth.
No. In a lunar eclipse Earth is between the sun and the moon, thus casting a shadow on the moon. When the moon passes between Earth and the sun it is a solar eclipse, to an observer on Earth, the moon eclipses the sun.
When the Earth is directly between the Moon and the Sun, it is a full moon.
When the moon is directly between the earth and the sun, it's a solar eclipse, because the moon blocks the light from the sun from reaching the earth.
Here are a few statements that I believe will answer your questions: -- Eclipses occur when the Sun, Earth, and Moon are almost perfectly in line. -- When the Earth is the one in the 'middle', the Moon is eclipsed, because it is then in the Earth's shadow. -- When the Moon is the one in the 'middle', the Sun is eclipsed for people in certain locations, because they are briefly in the Moon's shadow.