The dark circle (new moon)
The dark circle (new moon)
full
full moon
Yes you can see it before and after sunset!
after sunset and before sunrise
The Full Moon is opposite the Sun in the sky and therefore it rises as the Sun sets and sets as the Sun rises. (Actually, near the Earth's poles in summer, you can see the Full Moon during daylight.) You can never see the New Moon either because it is in line with the Sun and hidden by glare. (You can see the New Moon in the daytime, but only when there is a solar eclipse.)
For the brief period of a few hours when the Moon is nearest the Sun in the daytime sky, it is virtually unilluminated. It will be visible as the slimmest of crescent moons appearing either just before sunrise or just after sunset.
full moon
Sunrise to sunset.
Daytime starts at sunrise and ends at sunset. Sunrise and sunset occur when the top limb of the Sun is level with the horizon at sea level.
Sunset, sunrise, the daytime and nighttime skies in Antarctica display every colour imaginable.
As can be observed on any sunny day, the shadows are longest at sunrise and at sunset.
The hours between sunrise and sunset.
The sunrise in Abuja is between 5 and 6.8 hours before the sunset in Columbia.
Yes you can see it before and after sunset!
sunset.
You will never see a crescent moon during sunrise and before sunset because the moon rises and sets with the sun and when the crescent moon is visible, it is typically seen later in the evening or early in the morning.
That would vary from place to place, and from day to day. You can see the times of sunrise and sunset for an entire year on the U.S. Naval Observatory's Astronomical Data web page at the link below. http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/RS_OneYear.php
All comets are found before sunrise or sunset. As a general rule comets are not visible in day light so they would be found after sunset