The part of the Earth that experiences day and night at the same time is primarily the regions along the terminator line, which is the dividing line between the day side and the night side of the planet. As the Earth rotates, different locations move into and out of sunlight, leading to simultaneous day in some areas and night in others. This phenomenon occurs continuously as the Earth spins on its axis.
Half the Earth is light, the other half is dark. Anywhere on the dark half experiences night.
No. Day and night is determined by what part of Earth is facing the sun. Half of the Earth faces toward the sun and half of earth faces away from the sun. As the Earth spins on it's axis, we get daylight in one side of the earth, and night time in the other side of the earth. It is never possible to have night time, or day time, on all the earth at the exact same time.
No, perihelion and the December solstice do not happen at the same moment on Earth. Perihelion is when Earth is closest to the Sun in its orbit, occurring in early January, while the December solstice is when the Northern Hemisphere experiences its shortest day and longest night, occurring around December 21st.
Yes, they are the same speed.
There is no atmosphere to retain the heat that Mercury receives from the Sun, so it is all lost from the night side, radiated back into space. The same surface that reaches over 400 °C in the sun then plummets to -184 °C in a night that lasts 88 Earth days. The same situation occurs on the Earth's moon, where the temperature is scorching in the Sun and icy on the part that is in darkness.
Half the Earth is light, the other half is dark. Anywhere on the dark half experiences night.
Well to answer your quenstion the reason they are not in the same place is because the earth is moving so at night it is diffrent.
Our earth rotates not only around the sun but also around its own axis. i.e it spins about its own axis in anti-clockwise direction. while rotating the part of earth which is in front of sun experiences the day and the portion which is on opposite side experiences night. SO at same time, there is day in some parts of earth and there is night in some parts. For further details , contact saqibahmad81@yahoo.com
Nothing really happens to the sun at night. Instead it is what happens to the part of the Earth where it is night. The earth is always turning, and the part that is turned away from the sun and is in shadow is called night. The sun is shining just the same in other parts of the world at the same time that you have night. See the Web Link for a simple explanation of this.
No. Day and night is determined by what part of Earth is facing the sun. Half of the Earth faces toward the sun and half of earth faces away from the sun. As the Earth spins on it's axis, we get daylight in one side of the earth, and night time in the other side of the earth. It is never possible to have night time, or day time, on all the earth at the exact same time.
No. The moon Is constantly revolving around the Earth, which is revolving the Sun.
The sun stays in the same place, because we are rotating on an axis the sun appears to move. When its night time where you are the sun is shining on a different part of the earth.
No, the Sun is not cool at night. It burns the same way all the time. We find it darker and cooler at night because the Earth has turned the part of itself where you are away from the Sun.
When the side of the moon that faces Earth (the same side of the moon always faces Earth) is fully bathed in sunlight. The Moon experiences day and night cycles, but it takes 28 days for the moon to complete a day/night cycle because of the Moon's relatively slow spin (which is what keeps the same side of the Moon facing Earth).
When the side of the moon that faces Earth (the same side of the moon always faces Earth) is fully bathed in sunlight. The Moon experiences day and night cycles, but it takes 28 days for the moon to complete a day/night cycle because of the Moon's relatively slow spin (which is what keeps the same side of the Moon facing Earth).
No, as the Earth rotates so dawn appears in turn as each part of the earth turns to meet the sunrise.
We get day and light because the earth rotates on a tilted axis. That takes 24 hours for it. In that time, half of the earth's part is in sunlight and half is ind darkness (facing away from the sun). Half of the earth is in sunlight for 12 hours and the same for the part in darkness. The parts take turns so we have day and night.