Yes, you can see the sun set while you are on top of the London Eye.
If you stand at the South Pole, you see the sun set in the North. If you stand at the North Pole, you see the sun set in the South. If you stand anywhere else on Earth, you see the sun set in the West. To see the sun set in the East, you have to be off-planet, or travel very quickly from East to West. West
21.30 approx
Sunset in London, England on 14 Oct 2010 was at 18:10 BST (17:10 UTC).
Fog is rare in London outside of TV programmes set in the 1800s
Friday 21st Aug 2009, same date as every country. sun rise to sun set..
You carry a wristwatch set to GMT (UTC, London time). Wherever you go in the world, you wait to see when the sun is due south of you, or highest in the sky. When that happens, you look on your wristwatch to see what time it is back in London. For every hour after noon in London, you're 15 degrees west of there. For every hour before noon in London, you're 15 degrees east of there.
As intensity of sun light rays are greater so,when we see sun with our naked eyes the sun rays falls on eye lens which is convex which diverges the rays and make it difficult to see
You would see the sun set first in British Columbia due to its location on the west coast of Canada.
On the 8th of October 2008, the sun will rise at 07:13, it will set at 8:22, which gives 11h 08m of daylight.
You can see the sun by looking directly at it during sunrise or sunset when it appears less bright and safer to view for short periods. It's important to use proper eye protection like solar viewing glasses or filters to prevent eye damage when observing the sun directly. Avoid looking at the sun during peak hours, as this can cause permanent eye injury.
Sunset happens when the earth turns you far enough so that the line from your eye to the sun runs into the ground.
Yes