Science, asked by yaboiblessed, 10 months ago

Compare this image of a partial solar eclipse to that of a total solar eclipse. What accounts for the difference in what you see during the partial solar eclipse?

Group of answer choices

The Earth, Moon, and Sun are not in exact alignment.

This view is seen when you are standing in the umbra only.

It is not the time for the full moon phase so you see the partial eclipse.

The moon is farther away from the Earth and does not block the entire view,

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Answered by YQGW
2

Explanation:

The Earth, Moon, and Sun are not in exact alignment.

is the correct answer

Answered by bhaskarkamla9
1

Partial solar eclipses happen when the Moon comes between the Sun and Earth, but the Moon only partially covers the Sun's disk. ... During a partial solar eclipse, the Moon, the Sun and Earth don't align in a perfectly straight line, and the Moon casts only the outer part of its shadow, the penumbra, on Earth.

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