your question doesnt make sense-that part of the earth has-what does that mean? and the earth rotates, that's what makes night and day, so every part of the earth faces the sun for half of the 24 hours in a day(with the exeption of the north and south poles which are always dark and always light at parts of the year)
yes, Alaska
The part of the moon that is always in sunlight is the "near side" of the moon, which faces Earth and receives light from the sun. This is the side that we see from Earth, as the moon rotates at the same rate that it orbits Earth, keeping the same side facing us.
Earth is rotating on its axis and day and night occur as a result as the Earth spin. If the Sun is shining on a part of the Earth, they are having day time. If a part of the Earth is facing away from the Sun, there are having night time.
The polar regions receive less energy from the Sun for four reasons : 1) the angle of the Sun's rays is almost always greater than elsewhere on Earth 2) the albedo of the surface (reflectivity) is higher because of snow and ice 3) at any given time, either the arctic or the antarctic will be in winter, with very short days 4) the poles have significant cloud cover from storms
Earth has revolved around the sun.
the part of the earth that you are on faces the sun. (the earth rotates on its axis) When it faces the sun, you see it.
yes, Alaska
In winter, the part of Earth is not facing the Sun so it makes that season we have in North America cold. In summer, that part of Earth is facing the Sun which makes it hot. Spring and Fall are seasons that nearly faces all the Sun.
Because the Earth orbits around the sun, and the sun is more visible daytime. One part of the earth faces Sun during the day.
The part of the moon that is always in sunlight is the "near side" of the moon, which faces Earth and receives light from the sun. This is the side that we see from Earth, as the moon rotates at the same rate that it orbits Earth, keeping the same side facing us.
It doesn't. The part of the Earth closest to the sun is the part of the Earth experiencing Winter.
Of course not. If it's the center of the Earth, it means that it's part of the Earth, not the sun.
Earth is rotating on its axis and day and night occur as a result as the Earth spin. If the Sun is shining on a part of the Earth, they are having day time. If a part of the Earth is facing away from the Sun, there are having night time.
The polar regions receive less energy from the Sun for four reasons : 1) the angle of the Sun's rays is almost always greater than elsewhere on Earth 2) the albedo of the surface (reflectivity) is higher because of snow and ice 3) at any given time, either the arctic or the antarctic will be in winter, with very short days 4) the poles have significant cloud cover from storms
If only 1 side of earth faces the Sun, then that part will stay
what is the period when a given part of earth is facing the sun
The illuminated side of the moon is in excess of 250 degrees hotter than the other side. Only part of the moon faces the sun, which is the part I described as illuminated. The sun heats up the side that faces it and the moon does not have the protection of an Earth-like atmosphere.