Day and night above the moon


The earth rotates on its axis so that its surface passes over the sun. And there are nights in the back. Since every planet revolves on an axis, there is day and night. On earth we have 12 hours of day and 12 hours of night. But this period is different on different planets.

The moon is a satellite of the earth and it also orbits the sun with it rather than orbiting the earth. If we say day in the part where sunlight falls on the moon, then the matter of day and night on the moon is something different. The moon rotates slowly on its axis so it completes one cycle in our 2.5 days. That is why there is no atmosphere on the moon for our 2.5 days, so there is light only when the direct rays of the sun fall.

Due to the Earth's atmosphere, the sun's diagonal rays in the evening appear as faint sunlight due to atmospheric particles. This does not happen on the moon. There is a state of either light or darkness. When the sun's rays fall, it is light and half a foot away, where the sun's rays do not fall, darkness begins. There is no dim light in between.

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