For the moment, let us just think about one motion - - Earth's spin (or rotation) on its axis. Earth rotates or spins toward the east, and that's why the Sun, Moon, planets, and stars all rise in the east and make their way westward across the sky.
When the sun rises, the light from the sun becomes so bright that it outshines the stars, making them invisible to our eyes during the day. The stars are still present in the sky; they are just obscured by the sunlight. As the Earth rotates, we move into the sunlight, which is why we can't see the stars until after sunset.
No, stars are always present in the sky but they are not visible during the day because of the sun's brightness. As the Earth rotates, different stars come into view at night while others disappear below the horizon.
The sun doesn't move the earth rotates.
well... when the sun rises... thats when the sun comes up... when the sun sets.. the sun comes down... it can go either way honestly... but sunrise is before sunset in my opinion
The sun comes up at about 6:00 am.
No, the sun is not the hottest of all stars. There are stars that are up to 7 times hotter than the sun.
The duration of The Sun Comes Up is 1.55 hours.
The Sun Comes Up was created on 1949-01-27.
Burns and the sun makes stars light up as the light is reflected........
Sun Comes Up Again was created on 2010-08-16.
The word comes from Helios, the Sun. The element was discovered on the sun before its presence on earth was established. The sun, like most normal sequence stars is made up of hydrogen and helium.
Stars don't go up at night or in the day because the stars in the universe are always there. You can only see them, however, at night because there is no sunlight to block you from seeing them. The solar energy the stars give off aren't as bright as the sun's, causing them to seem like they aren't there when they actually always are.