Imagine you are riding on a roundabout, with a lamp post in the middle of it. As you are riding you look upwards at the lamp, and it always seems to stay in the same place as everything else goes round you.
In normal life the Earth is our roundabout and the Pole star is the lamp. It is called the pole star because it is in line with the Earth's north and south poles, on a line that we can call the lamp-post.
No The moon roates around the earth. The earth rotates around the sun within the solar system.
Great question. If you photograph it and measure the outcome, you will find that there is no difference compared to zenith Sun size. This is true of the Moon as well. It's just an illusion based on having something near it to compare the size to.
The night doesn't move, the earth rotates. Whenever the earth rotates, different sides of the earth receive light from the sun, while the other side is dark, thus making it day and night. or This a lyric from the song "Night Moves" by Bob Seger. or It Crackes Me Up
To move in a circle around something is called revolving. To move around the same point is called rotation. To move around another stationary object is called orbiting. The earth rotates on its own axis while also orbiting around the sun.
Passing by a tree while driving is somewhat similar to the rotation of the Earth around the sun in that when you are in the car you are in motion and the tree is still, though the tree appears to be moving closer. The sun appears to rise and set, but in reality it remains still and and the Earth is the moving vehicle.
No. The Sun is stationary, while the Earth rotates around the Sun. So the Earth is a satellite to the Sun.
The Pole Star appears to be stationary in the Northern sky, while other stars move in a circular orbit as the earth rotates. Once the Pole Star is found, people can use the pole to navigate should a compass is not available.
The North Pole Star appears to be stationary as the Earth rotates round the axis of North and South Poles. Proof of this is when an an open shutter camera is pointed directly at the Pole Star and left for several hours. The image captured will show that the Pole Star appears almost stationary, while the other stars streak in a circle round it due to the Earth's rotation.
it rotates while the moon is orbiting the earth
The Sun stays still while the Earth rotates on its axis while revolving around the Sun. The Moon rotates on its axis while revolving around the Earth.
No. The Sun rotates on its axis in about 25 days, while the Earth rotates in 1 day.
month..!
They are very similar. Earth rotates once in 23hr 56 min while Mars rotates in 24hr 39 min
Because, the earth rotates on its axis at a 23.5 degree tilt and while it rotates the sun will hit one side and then the moon will hit the otherXD
No The moon roates around the earth. The earth rotates around the sun within the solar system.
earth plates can and do collide, even though the earth rotates around the sun
The Pole Star appears as a single point of light in the sky due to its distance from Earth and its relative position to the celestial pole. It is essentially a bright star located near the Earth's rotational axis, so it appears stationary while other stars seem to move due to Earth's rotation.