All planets in the solar system reflect light from the Sun at night; remember they rotate on their axis and so during their night (or our night, for that matter) one side of a planet will always be facing the sun. Whether they're visible from an observer on Earth during our night is a different question - the inner planets, by virtue of the fact they're closer to the Sun, could be seen only in favorable conditions near sunset or sunrise (since they couldn't appear more distant than a narrow angle away from the sun in the sky, being inside Earth's orbit).
Planets reflect at least some portion of all light that lands on them, be is starlight or sunlight. Light from the Sun dominates within the solar system. The fraction of light they reflect as compared to incident light landing on them is called the albedo.
All the planets reflect light, none of them emit light.
Planets reflect light from the sun , that's how we see them.
All planets reflect light, thus the reason we can see them through the telescope.
All planets reflect some amount of sunlight, b/c that's what a surface will do if it isn't perfectly matte black.
All of them. Some, however, don't have much.
They all reflect light in varying degrees. If there were any that did not reflect light we would not know about them.
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It reflects light. The only body in our solar system that emits light is the sun. The Earth also emits light from fires, volcanic eruptions and electric lighting but not enough to illuminate something as large as another planet.
No, it reflects the light from the sun onto the Earth.
The Sun is a star and emits solar light, and is at the centre of our Universe. The Moon is a small satellite planet that orbits the Earth, and only reflects the light striking the Moon's surface.
Neither the sun nor the moon are planets. The sun is brighter than the moon by far. The sun emits its own light. The moon only reflects light from the sun.
Mars does not emit its own light. Rather it reflects sunlight that falls on it.
it reflects
The sun is a star that is extremely hot and is a source of light for the planet. While the moon is a mass that orbits around earth and reflects light.
It reflects light. The only body in our solar system that emits light is the sun. The Earth also emits light from fires, volcanic eruptions and electric lighting but not enough to illuminate something as large as another planet.
It can be seen by the eye.
Jupiter is not luminous in that it emits light, it reflects the Suns light so that it is visible to us on Earth. See also Albedo.
A star generates energy, including light, which it emits into space, i.e. it is luminous. A planet can only be seen because it reflects the Sun's light, i.e. it is non-luminous.
The Earth does not emit light, it like the moon reflects light
No, it reflects the light from the sun onto the Earth.
The Sun is a star and emits solar light, and is at the centre of our Universe. The Moon is a small satellite planet that orbits the Earth, and only reflects the light striking the Moon's surface.
Neither the sun nor the moon are planets. The sun is brighter than the moon by far. The sun emits its own light. The moon only reflects light from the sun.
A planet reflects light from another sourse such as the sun.
Yes.