I can't Understand you Sorry
Answer:
The color of the vegetation in a sketch of a map is green.
Explanation:
The maps use several different methods to depict the geographic space and its characteristics in the best possible manner to the reader of the map. One of those methods is the use of colors. The colors are put on maps in accordance with what they associate the people the most when it comes to geography and the environment.
When it comes to depicting the vegetation, the color that is found on the maps is green. This has several reasons as to why it is so. The green color is most often associated with nature, with plants, greenery if you will, so it is the primary color that people associate with vegetation. Even though not all plants are green, like the bark of the trees for example can be dark or light brown, ashy, greyish, reddish, and there are grasses, shrubs, and flowers in every color, one thing that the majority of them have in comon is green leaves and stems, which are the ones that are the most striking to the human eye.
Answer: two solar eclipses separated by one Saros cycle will have the same geometric characteristics (they will both be total, or partial or annular).
A Saros is a period of time of about 18 years 11 days and 8 hours and represents the time needed for the system composed by Moon, Earth, and Sun to return to its initial position.
Indeed, this is due to a natural harmony of the Moon’s motion: it takes 29.53 days to complete one orbit around Earth (Synodic Month), it takes 27.21 days to pass from the same node of its orbit (Draconic Month) and it takes 27.55 days to go from perigee to perigee (Anomalistic Month); the composition of these three motions gives one Saros of around 6585.3 days, composed by 223 Synodic Months, 239 Anomalistic Months and 242 Draconic Months (with a precision of few hours).
It has been observed that after one Saros cycle Moon, Earth and Sun are in the same initial position, therefore an eclipse occurring on day 1 of two consecutive Soros cycles would have the same geometric characteristics, which means that one Saros can be considered the periodicity of solar and lunar eclipses.
Due to the fact that a Saros is not composed by a whole number of days (we have a remainder of 8 hours), the two eclipses won’t be visible from the same location on Earth due to the rotation around its axis. It takes about 3 Soros for this to happen.