Want this question answered?
hot air rises during the night and sinks during the day.
You take that medication twice a day
These are tides, and they caused by the tug of lunar gravity (and to a lesser extent, solar gravity). These periodic rises and falls have nothing to do with melting glacial ice from global warming.
There are some relatively small variations in that number during the course of a month. But on the average, over a complete cycle of phases, the moon rises 48.76 minutes later each day than it did the day before. (24 hours in 29.53 days).
High tide is for 6 hours and low tide is for the next 6 hours,this in 24 hours the sea water rises twice and falls twice.
If by "day" is meant the solar day on Mercury, then the Sun rises twice a day near the 90° meridians, and all meridians at high latitudes.
When the ocean rises each day at high tide, seawater flows into this lowland creating many swamps.
Tides
tide
hot air rises during the night and sinks during the day.
Twicw a dah
I use it twice a day.
The level of dew point temperature at which the clouds condense rises during the day.Hence the bases of the clouds will be higher at day time.
The moon not only rises at night but it also rises during the day. The moon rising and setting is related to the moon's orbit around the earth and the eartrh'sorbit around the sun.
No and no. The moon rises at intervals separated by approximately 25 hours. Sometimes it rises at night, sometime it rises during the day. It always rises "in the east", but the precise location varies: sometimes it's further north, sometimes further south.
Sun rises in the East and sets in the west. So it travels westwards during the day.
There are many times that the moon can be seen during the day. It all depends where the moon rises in conjunction with the position of the Sun. When the moon rises the Sun must be opposite in order for it's light to hit the moon to reflect back to earth.