Same way as the Earth, since they move together.
The Earth orbits around the Sun, while the Moon orbits around the Earth. The Sun remains stationary at the center of our solar system, while both Earth and Moon move in elliptical paths around their respective orbits.
From our perspective on Earth, it appears that the sun moves across the sky due to Earth's rotation. In reality, the sun is in constant motion within our galaxy, the Milky Way. It orbits the center of the galaxy along with all the other stars in a vast cosmic dance.
The sun does not orbit around the moon. The earth orbits the sun and the earths moon (every planet has 1 or more moons) orbits earth.
When the sun appears to move across the sky from east to west each day, it is actually the Earth rotating on its axis that creates this perception. The Earth revolves around the sun in a yearly orbit, not the other way around. This daily movement of the sun across the sky is due to the Earth's rotation.
Because a solar eclipse occurs when the moon blocks the sun. The only way for this to happen is if the moon is between the sun and the earth. When the moon is between the sun and the earth, it is a new moon.
The Moon travels across the sky in the same direction as the Sun; Its' leading edge is the point at which phase changes start and move from right to left.
Earth rotates on its axis The moon orbits the Earth The sun IS a star so stars move the same way Earth takes a year to orbit the sun Moon takes a month to orbit the earth Earth takes a day to orbit around its axis The Sun does NOT move
The sun and the moon appear to move across the sky each day due to Earth's rotation on its axis. The sun appears to rise in the east and set in the west because of the Earth's eastward rotation. The moon also follows a similar path across the sky, as it orbits around the Earth.
Yes, both the sun and the moon appear to move across the sky due to the Earth's rotation. The sun rises in the east and sets in the west, while the moon rises in the east and sets in the west as well, but its movement is more complex due to its orbit around the Earth.
Suspots don't actually MOVE across the face of the Sun; a sunspot pretty much stays put. So when we see sunspots APPEAR to move, what we're actually seeing is the rotation of the Sun itself.
well actually the moon is way far away to the sun but to us they are close but it is always called the moon but once its the moon on top pf the sun or the other way around its called an eclipse
The earth turns on its axis; it orbits around the earth-moon barycenter; it orbits around the sun.
Put a stick in the ground and look at the changes in the direction and length of its shadow.
The Earth orbits around the Sun, while the Moon orbits around the Earth. The Sun remains stationary at the center of our solar system, while both Earth and Moon move in elliptical paths around their respective orbits.
Its the earth that moves, not the Sun. This happens because the Earth rotates towards the east. Here's a way to see how this works. Sit in a chair that can spin, and turn on a lamp across from you. Give the chair a spin but sit still and don't move your head. You will see the lamp move across your field of view just like the Sun moves across Earth's field of view (the sky).
Our moon is the smallest.
The sun (Way bigger)Then the earthThen the moonThe sun is the largest out of the moon, sun, and earth.moon earth sun