No, the cardinal directions (north, south, east, west) do not change based on which direction you are facing. East will always be to the right, and west will always be to the left, regardless of your orientation.
Could be anything, the two phenomena are not connected. If you meant, what is the phase of the moon when it is at its highest point at sunrise, the answer is it is approximately at 3rd quarter, a half moon facing east.
If you are facing south, then east is to your left.
Left is a relative direction depending on the orientation you are facing. In general, when facing north, left is towards the west.
As long as you are not standing on either the North or South Poles, the east would be to your right.
If you are facing the sunrise, then south is to your right. The east is where the sun rises, which means south will be on your right side, west will be behind you, and north will be to your left.
No, the sun in general rises in the east and sets in the west.
No, the cardinal directions (north, south, east, west) do not change based on which direction you are facing. East will always be to the right, and west will always be to the left, regardless of your orientation.
Could be anything, the two phenomena are not connected. If you meant, what is the phase of the moon when it is at its highest point at sunrise, the answer is it is approximately at 3rd quarter, a half moon facing east.
Sunrise Earth - 2004 Sunrise East 1-24 was released on: USA: 28 October 2004
east
The sunrise in Australia is in the east, as it is for most places on Earth. Australia's east coast faces the Pacific Ocean, so the sunrise appears over the ocean from this vantage point.
The east coast see sunrise first.
To the EAST.
when the sun rises in the east
If you are facing south, then east is to your left.
East, I think