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Not 100% sure but if you look at the sun and see its in the middle its noon so you can estimate from there. Sorry if it wasnt that helpful...
The sun will APPEAR to be 'highest in the sky' at mid-day right on 12 o'clock. I hope this helps you. :)
the sun does move in the sky
The sun and moon are always in the sky, but for half of the time, the earth turns you away from the part of the sky where they are, so that you can't see them. During those times, people on the other side of the earth can see them.
A sun dial is a graded flat disc, with an upright spike in the middle of it. The spike will throw a shadow that will move across the graded disc as the sun moves across the sky. If the sun dial is correctly aligned, the position of the shadow will tell you what time it is.
Not 100% sure but if you look at the sun and see its in the middle its noon so you can estimate from there. Sorry if it wasnt that helpful...
it's like a big clock. if it is near the east, it is the morning...if it is in the middle of the sky, it is noon...if it is near the west, it is the evening. you'd have to estimate what time it is.
At "local apparent noon", when the Sun is highest in the sky. This will be noon on your watch only if you are at the middle meridian in your time zone and if you are not on daylight savings time.
At "local apparent noon", when the Sun is highest in the sky. This will be noon on your watch only if you are at the middle meridian in your time zone and if you are not on daylight savings time.
The sun is always in the sky. But, as the earth rotates, some of the time (at night) your part of the earth is facing away from the so you think it is not in the sky.
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Did they look were the sun was in the sky and have to estimate what time it was
The sun is lowest in the sky in the northern hemisphere around December 21st, the time of the Winter Solstice.
The sun will APPEAR to be 'highest in the sky' at mid-day right on 12 o'clock. I hope this helps you. :)
The length of time it stays in the sky doesn't change. What changes is the length of time that you can see it.The moon is in the sky for just about the same amount of time every day as everything else is ... the sun, the planets, the stars, etc. Actually almost 25 minutes longer every day than all the rest, on the average.As the moon's position in the sky changes, the length of time it stays up after the sun sets changes.When it's nearest to the sun in the sky ... appearing as a skinny crescent ... it either rises just before the sun, or sets just after the sun.When it's farthest from the sun in the sky (at the time of Full Moon), it rises just as the sun sets, and is in the sky all night.But the truth is that any time the moon is more than half full ... for about the middle two weeks of every full cycle of phases ... it's bright enough to see during the day too, if you know where to look.
During a full moon, the Sun is opposite to the Moon, in the sky.During a full moon, the Sun is opposite to the Moon, in the sky.During a full moon, the Sun is opposite to the Moon, in the sky.During a full moon, the Sun is opposite to the Moon, in the sky.
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