Can shadows on a sundial go clockwise or counterclockwise, depending on the time of day? In the northern hemisphere, the sun is below a building casting a shadow, so when the earth rotates "east", the shadow starts at around 9 AM and finishes around 3 pm. Shadow went clockwise.
This was cited as the reason for this occurring, but I can't find any evidence that the sun goes into retrograde (or the earth goes into retrograde from the vantage point of the sun). So basically I don't get it.https://twitter.com/luismbat/status/1138624307217588224 …
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Technically, every day a year, every city close enough to the equator to experience a seasonal change in shadow direction, will have its shadows switch direction, but it would basically be unobservable because on that day the sun's position would mean shadows wouldn't rotate.
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Planets go retrograde because we're on the earth, which is not in direct orbit with the planet that we are observing, unlike the sun and moon.pic.twitter.com/VCM4Ag5wZ3
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