In effect yes because the suns light would be reflected of it, the nights would be lighter though as SOME light would get through to the other side
Time as humans know it is a concept relative to the rotation of the Earth. If the Earth stopped rotating around the Sun, than Earth as a planet would begin to die from cold and lack of sunlight.
Yes, as it's still glass. There is no chemical/molecular change.
I would have to say Pyrex
Glass
microscope
No
Yes. Glass is transparent, not invisible. Water's pretty transparent, but it's impossible to see the bottom of the ocean in most places, even when it's only a few kilometers deep. A typical absorption coefficient for glass might be 10-6 per cm. After a million centimeters (1 km), there's not going to be much light getting through. A glass object the size of Earth (about 12000 km diameter) would not let any detectable amount of light through.
Glass mostly. A greenhouse would need sunlight.
if there was no sunlight life on earth would not survive for very long.
the earth would burn if the sun strike the earth
For a start, it would become dark. In the long term, no life would survive on Earth without sunlight.
Sunlight does not follow the Earth's axis. The Earth's seasons are determined, in part, by the Sun's position to the Earth's axis.
If sunlight stopped reaching the Earth, the Earth would soon freeze solid.
During a lunar eclipse with no atmosphere on Earth, the moon would appear dark and reddish due to the sunlight refracted by the Earth's atmosphere. Without the atmosphere, the moon would not have the red hue and would instead appear darker and possibly slightly illuminated by sunlight passing through the Earth's shadow.
No, a magnifying glass is used to concentrate sunlight in order to produce heat, not electricity. To create electricity, you would need a device such as a solar panel that converts sunlight into electrical energy.
All the energy for living things and all the energy for fossil fuel, hydroelectric and wind energy comes form the energy of sunlight. Without sunlight there would be no life and Earth would be a frozen dead planet.
Stars DO shine in the daytime; in fact, they shine all the time. But the Earth's atmosphere scatters some of the sunlight, making the sky appear to be blue. That scattered sunlight is still so bright that you cannot see the dim pinpoints of starlight by comparison. And without the Sun so bright and close by, all life on Earth would quickly die out, because the atmosphere would freeze solid and there would no longer be any air.