Science, asked by fariimehar26, 3 days ago

(D) 1. What causes a solar eclipse? During a solar eclipse the Moon passes between the Sun and the Earth and it fully or partially covers the Sun. Do you think that when it happens the whole Earth will be in darkness? Why or why not?​

Answers

Answered by kritika9rajput
0

Answer:

A solar eclipse occurs when the moon gets between Earth and the sun, and the moon casts a shadow over Earth.

The Sun is completely blocked in a solar eclipse because the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun. During a total solar eclipse, the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun. This completely blocks out the Sun's light. However, the Moon is about 400 times smaller than the Sun.

Explanation:

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Answered by preeti353615
0

Answer:

When the Moon orbits Earth, it occasionally passes between the Sun and the Earth. The Moon blocks the Sun's light from reaching Earth when this happens. This results in a solar eclipse, or a total eclipse of the Sun.

Explanation:

Because the Moon passes between Earth and the Sun during a solar eclipse, the Sun is fully hidden. Even though the Moon is much smaller than the Sun, it may entirely obscure the Sun's light from Earth's perspective because it is just the appropriate distance away.

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