The apparent speed at which the Sun "goes down" is due to the Earth's rotation, which takes approximately 24 hours to complete. This rotation creates the illusion of the Sun moving across the sky and "setting" in the west.
The Earth orbits the sun approximately 1 time per year.
The Earth does not fall into the sun because it is moving fast enough around it. Imagine a weight on the end of a string like a conker, with the weight being the earth, and where you hold the string being the sun. If you swing it around fast enough, the weight spins in circles and does not go near your hand, but if you swing it slowly, the weight will fall in. So because the earth is spinning fast enough around the sun, it does not fall in.
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The Earth doesn't fall into the Sun because it is constantly in motion, moving forward with enough speed to counteract the pull of the Sun's gravity. This balance between the Earth's forward motion and the Sun's gravitational pull keeps the Earth in a stable orbit around the Sun.
140,00o kilometers
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It depends how fast you go, of course.
It depends how fast you are going. If travelling at the speed of light you will reach the sun in just over 8 minutes.
Because Mercury is so close to the sun, it needs to go that fast or it would be pulled into the sun and destroyed.
The apparent speed at which the Sun "goes down" is due to the Earth's rotation, which takes approximately 24 hours to complete. This rotation creates the illusion of the Sun moving across the sky and "setting" in the west.
The moon orbits the Earth, not the sun. It takes about 27.3 days for the moon to complete one orbit around the Earth.
no because the planet dose not go fast or slow about its weight it depens on the revalvtation.
astroides that go past the sun or are moving really fast that they light on fire and come down to any planet
It takes Eris approximately 557 Earth years to complete one orbit around the Sun.
it all depends on how much sun, how light the car is, humidity and many other factors.
It ends at night. Muslims fast from sun-up to sun-down, braking their fast in the evening.