They can see it as it was brightly coloured(bright yellow)
If the sun can't shine on the moon, then the moon isn't illuminated, and it's not visible. Think of it this way: You take a flashlight and a tennis ball into a dark room. You turn on the flashlight and point it at the tennis ball. You notice that you can see the tennis ball. Now your little brother, who has been hiding in the room all along, jumps up out of hiding, and sticks a basketball right between the flashlight and the tennis ball. The front of the basketball is now illuminated, but the tennis ball is dark. It is in the shadow of the basketball. As long as your brother stands there and holds the basketball in the way, the ants on the dark, 'night' side of the basketball may witness a stunning eclipse of the tennis ball.
Your weakness is something you want to avoid because other tennis players will find that weakness and then try to beat you with that. The sun is something you want to avoid also it can be hard for you to serve if the sun is in your eyes.
Astronomically, you only get smaller masses orbiting larger ones - try imagining a tennis ball on the end of a string, with you swinging the tennis ball around. Now imagine the tennis ball swinging you!
Astronomically, you only get smaller masses orbiting larger ones - try imagining a tennis ball on the end of a string, with you swinging the tennis ball around. Now imagine the tennis ball swinging you!
Tennis balls are not generally yellow. They are usually green. A tennis ball can become yellow if it is left out in the sun for a very long time (months and months), and will turn yellow due to sun exposure.
Yes. Exactly like the earth. Both of them are half-illuminated by the sun. You can understand why half can see the sun and the other half can't, if you think about what you can do with a tennis ball and a flashlight in a dark room.
Most sport players, let alone the ones in Tennis , are not big fans of wearing any type of glasses for obvious reasons. I guess the Pros will have some UV lenses that would serve the purpose of the sun glass.
its unknown no one has heated up a tennis ball without it exploding- good luck
the sun is in the shape of a sphere but the sun we see is alot smaller then it really is. it does have a giant ball of gas around it but it does have a solid surface.
No, the moon is not a giant ball of fire. It is a rocky object that reflects the light of the sun, which is why we see it bright in the sky.
The children can push the tennis ball in a circular path around the football, representing the orbit of the Earth around the Sun. They should ensure that the tennis ball completes one full circle around the football to model one year in orbit. This activity can help demonstrate the concept of Earth's revolution around the Sun.
Ok. Sun: basket ball mecury: marble venus and earth: tennis ball mars: pingpong ball jupiter: medium sized football saturn: small sized football Uranus: pingpong ball neptune: pingpong ball (pluto): marble