no , depending on your climate of the area you are around during moonrise will affect the brightness of the moon but not the color.
The brightness of a star at 10 parsecs (32.6 light-years) from Earth would depend on its intrinsic luminosity and the amount of light that reaches Earth. The apparent brightness, or apparent magnitude, of the star would decrease with the square of the distance from Earth. This is described by the inverse square law, which states that the brightness is inversely proportional to the square of the distance.
Absolute Brightness: How bright a star appears at a certain distance. Apparent Brightness: The brightness of a star as seen from Earth.
our earth would be stinky dirty there would be dead animals everywhere
No. Only one of the poles would.
The four main moons all look about the same brightness as seen from Earth, and they are all at about the same distance from the Earth. That means that their brightness seen from Jupiter would depend on their distances from Jupiter.
There would be no seasons on Earth if the Earth's axis had no tilt because throughout the year the Earth would get an equal amount of sun everywhere.
No, you would not.
A decrease in a star's absolute brightness could be caused by the star moving farther away from Earth, interstellar dust blocking some of its light, or a decrease in the star's temperature. All of these factors would result in less light reaching Earth, causing a decrease in the star's apparent brightness.
The apparent brightness of the sun would decrease because the intensity of sunlight weakens with distance. By moving the Earth from 1 AU to 2 AU, the distance between the Earth and the Sun doubles, resulting in a decrease in the amount of sunlight reaching Earth and causing a decrease in apparent brightness.
Yes, there is a correlation between the time of moonrise and the time of high tide due to the gravitational pull of the moon on Earth's oceans. High tides generally occur when the moon is either directly overhead or on the opposite side of the Earth, which coincides with the times of moonrise and moonset. However, the exact timing can vary depending on local geography and other factors, so while there is a general correlation, it may not always align perfectly.
That's called the star's "absolute magnitude".
Everyone and everything would be everywhere. We would float around. In other words there wouldn't be no life.