It would look dark and thin on the edges, and getting oh so thicker and brighter near the center.
Like a long (milky colored) cloud in the sky - that moves with the stars and not the wind.
yes on a clear night
The Earth is in the Milky Way Galaxy. We can see stars at night, so yes.
I know that we are near the edge. (It is round.) Does that help? (It is much more dense in the middle; that is what you see at night when you see "the Milky Way" - the middle there-of.)
Due to Earth's rotation.
Yes, the Earth is a planet orbiting a star which we call the Sun. The Sun is just one of billions of stars orbiting the center of our galaxy which we call the Milky Way. The Milky Way is just one of billions of galaxies that we know to exist in our visible universe.
Earth and Neptune are both in the Milky Way, so on that basis, the Milky Way is zero distance from us. What we sometimes call the Milky Way is a hazy area going through the night sky. That is much further away than Neptune is.
Earth's movement around the sun bends the light.
Earth's movement around the sun bends the light.
the earth because the earth moves
No clouds always appear white. It is only night because the Earth is rotating and the Sun is not shining light on that part of the Earth.
Yes, the Milky Way can be seen from Earth, but it depends on factors like light pollution and weather conditions. In areas with low light pollution and clear skies, the Milky Way can be visible to the naked eye as a faint band of light stretching across the night sky.