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A day on the moon is about 29.5 Earth days long, which is roughly equivalent to a lunar month. A year on the moon, however, is about the same length as a year on Earth, as it takes the moon approximately 27.3 Earth days to complete one orbit around the Earth.
It isn't. A "day on the Moon" is about 29.5 Earth days; a year is about 365 days.
A day on the moon is 29.5 Earth days. The moon takes 27.3 days to fully orbit the Earth. This is called a sidereal day.
no
The Moon "year" is basically the same as the Earth's, because they orbit the Sun together. That's about 365.25 Earth days. A Moon "day" is about 27.3 or 29.5 Earth days, depending on the definition used for day. So, the answer is "shorter".
Chinese New Year starts with the new moon of the first day of the new year. It then ends 15 days later, with the full moon!
You can not see the whole moon every day or (night). The moon does not shrink, or disappear. It is just the place and angle you are at, because you can not see it.
Because the Moon Turns Slower Then The Earth.
You can see a full moon any time of the year. (But not every day of course)
lantern moon
Day - When the earth does a spin Month - When the moon orbits us Year - When we orbit the sun
A day and a year on the moon are the same length because the moon rotates on its axis at the same rate that it orbits around the Earth, causing one side of the moon to always face us. This synchronous rotation results in a day (one full rotation) on the moon taking the same amount of time as a complete orbit around the Earth (a year).