we cannot see the moon on cloudy days
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we cannot see the moon on cloudy days because the cloud covers the atmosphere and does not allow the light coming from the moon to reach our eye.
hope it helps u in anyway and if it does then plz mark it as brainliest
hope it helps u in anyway and if it does then plz mark it as brainliest
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Possibility one: You live in an undersea city.
Possibility two: You are stuck in solitary confinement.
Possibility three: You aren’t looking for it.
Why can we not see the moon during the day?
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49 ANSWERS
C Stuart Hardwick, Scifi author and science nerd.
Updated Apr 24
Q: Why can we not see the moon during the day?
Possibility one: You live in an undersea city.
Possibility two: You are stuck in solitary confinement.
Possibility three: You aren’t looking for it.
The moon appears in the daytime sky for much of every month. It has to, since we are spining 27 times faster than it orbits us. It spends half its time on the sunward side of our orbit and half its time on the spaceward side, while we spin around beneath it. From roughly first to last quarter, excluding a few days around the new moon, it’s easily visible in the daytime sky from most places on Earth.
Now, it can’t be more than about half full when it’s in the daytime sky, so it’s not quite as obvious during the day, but it’s there if you look for it.
Possibility two: You are stuck in solitary confinement.
Possibility three: You aren’t looking for it.
Why can we not see the moon during the day?
Answer
8
Follow
Request
More
Ad by MailChimp
Be yourself. But bigger.
MailChimp's features are powerful enough for large businesses and work with any size budget.
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49 ANSWERS
C Stuart Hardwick, Scifi author and science nerd.
Updated Apr 24
Q: Why can we not see the moon during the day?
Possibility one: You live in an undersea city.
Possibility two: You are stuck in solitary confinement.
Possibility three: You aren’t looking for it.
The moon appears in the daytime sky for much of every month. It has to, since we are spining 27 times faster than it orbits us. It spends half its time on the sunward side of our orbit and half its time on the spaceward side, while we spin around beneath it. From roughly first to last quarter, excluding a few days around the new moon, it’s easily visible in the daytime sky from most places on Earth.
Now, it can’t be more than about half full when it’s in the daytime sky, so it’s not quite as obvious during the day, but it’s there if you look for it.
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