Have you seen a picture of Earth taken from space at night?
Yes
No
If yes, how did you feel when you looked at it?
If no, how do you think it will look?
Answers
Answer:
yes
Explanation:
I saw the picture and it was looking like 3D and it felt like we are in the solar system. it was just too beautiful and I like that a lot.
Answer:
yes I seen a picture of Earth taken from space at night.
Explanation:
yes i have seen a picture of earth taken from space at night.
The earth is spinning. Once every 24 hours, the Earth rotates or spins on its axis – taking us all with it. When we are on the side of the Earth that faces the Sun, we have daylight. As the Earth continues its rotation, we are moved to the side away from our Sun and have night. If we were looking down at the Earth from high above the North Pole, we could see that the Earth rotates counterclockwise, and we could watch daylight and darkness spread across our globe from east to west.
Yes! All the planets in our solar system spin on their axes (as does our Sun!) and thus have day and night cycles. However, there are differences in the length of day and night - the cycles are even more complex due to the tilt of the planet's axis and the speed of its orbit. Some planets rotate faster than Earth and some rotate slower. Mars has a day-night cycle similar to Earth. Mars rotates on its axis once every 24.6 hours. Venus rotates on its axis once every 243 Earth days (which is only slightly longer than it takes for Venus to orbit the Sun!). Mercury's day-night cycle is more complex. Mercury rotates one and a half times during each revolution around the Sun. Because of this, Mercury's day from sunrise to sunrise is 176 Earth days long. Larger planets spin much faster. Jupiter rotates once every 10 hours, Saturn rotates once every 11 hours, and Neptune completes a rotation in 16 hours. Pluto, at the farthest reaches of our solar system, rotates on its axis once every 6.4 days.
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