Yes, every moon spins on it's axis while it orbits. The Moon which orbits Earth spins, but because it is orbiting us at the same time we can only ever see on face of the moon. That's why there is the Dark Side of The Moon. I think you can see roughly 50.8% of the Moon's Surface on Earth.
As far as we know, no rogue planet has ever come near Earth. Comets and asteroids have come near Earth, but not actual planets.
No. They're the points where the imaginary pencil that the Earth spins on pokes through the Earth's surface.
Many times
No scientists from Earth have ever been to Mars.
No planet goes around the Earth. The Moon, Earth's satellite orbits around the Earth, once ever 27 days and 7 hours.
The Earth orbits the Sun once every 365.25 days. The Earth spins on its axis once in 24 hours.
Yes, every moon spins on it's axis while it orbits. The Moon which orbits Earth spins, but because it is orbiting us at the same time we can only ever see on face of the moon. That's why there is the Dark Side of The Moon. I think you can see roughly 50.8% of the Moon's Surface on Earth.
As far as we know, no rogue planet has ever come near Earth. Comets and asteroids have come near Earth, but not actual planets.
No. They're the points where the imaginary pencil that the Earth spins on pokes through the Earth's surface.
The Moon and Earth
its not the biggest planet in the world it is almost average.
No human has ever been to another planet except the moon. These days the moon is not considered a planet but it was in ancient times. No human has ever been to Earth because that implies you're back from travel. We are all here already.
The Moon is "tidally locked" to the Earth, so it spins at the same speed as it orbits the Earth - once per 27 days. So we always see the same side of the Moon - the "near side".
Apart from Earth, no humans have ever been on another Planet, whether they be Canadian, Irish or Bengali.
Many times
no, because the moon isn't a planet, and earth is the only one.