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Because the earth spins on it's axis with a sun on one side of the earth and the moon the other side of the earth and there is an imaginary line across half of the earth and which half gets on to the sun or moon side it is night and so that means the other half is day.
As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.As viewed from Earth, we never see the complete bottom half of the Moon illuminated. Due to the position of the Moon in relation to the Sun, the angle of the Lunar terminator, which is the line between the dark and bright parts as we see it, does change. So sometimes more of the lower half is lit than the upper half. There isn't a particular name for that.
Mars has day and night for the same reasons that Earth has day and night. Mars, like Earth, rotates on an axis. That means that the Mars is spinning like a top. As the planet spins, half of it is facing the sun, and the other half isn't. So the half that is facing the sun experiences daytime, and the other half has nighttime. The planet spins around so the the same half is facing the sun every 24.6 (almost 25) hours. This is the same way that we see night and day, except Earth spins a little faster, so we have a complete day and night every 24 hours.
No. The Moon is orbiting the Earth, but is illuminated by the Sun. About half of the Moon's total surface is illuminated by the Sun at any one time. As the Moon orbits the Earth, the same side always faces the Earth. The phases of the Moon represent the part of that face that is lighted on that particular day. We cannot see the far side of the Moon, but it will have the remaining part of the illuminated one-half.
Half of the Earth at a time.
The tilt of the earth's axis with respect to the plane of its orbit causes more daylight over one of the earth's hemispheres for half of the year, and over the other hemisphere during the other half of the year. Whichever hemisphere has more hours of sunshine receives more solar energy, experiences gradually increasing temperatures, and eventually calls the season "Summer".
Half the Earth is light, the other half is dark. Anywhere on the dark half experiences night.
At any one time half of the earth has sunlight and the other half does not. The half that has sunlight experiences day while the other half with no sunlight experiences night. Day and night happens because of earth's rotation.
Yes, the Sunshine Coast is north of Brisbane, with a drive of about an hour and a half.
11 and a half hours
It depends on which half is facing the sun.
Half of the world experiences night and half day this is because the sun is not all the way around the earth at one time. so basically no
Earth has day and nights because the sun can only shine on one part of the Earth at a time, resulting in one half of the Earth in darkness, and one half of the Earth with light. The days and nights last only 12 hours because the Earth rotates around the sun once every 24 hours. Half of the time, the sun will shine an a particular spot on the Earth, the other half of the time, the sun will not shine causing darkness.
11 and a half some times more
The Earth rotates once on its axis every 24hrs. The half of the Earth facing the Sun experiences daylight while the held of the Earth facing away from the Sun is in darkness, aka night. As the Earth is constantly rotating the portions of the Earth that are experiencing daybreak and nightfall are constantly changing.
Half
Half-moon Half-Earth