mabye y do u want 2 know
No.
No, it is not possible to fall off the Moon. The Moon has gravity, although its gravity is weaker than Earth's. If someone were to jump off the Moon's surface, they would eventually fall back due to its gravitational pull.
No, the flag on the moon did not fall when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin blasted off because there is no atmosphere on the moon to cause the flag to float or fall. However, the motion from the rocket blast-off did cause the flag to ripple.
The reason it looks a little orange in fall is because of the sun> a eclipse is about to happen when the suns rays reflect off the moon
Normaly, horse riders/racers will fall off the horse. Someties it can cause bad injuries. Ride carefuly!
You cannot fall of the moon, well maybe you could if you had the leg strength to jump 2.3 kilometers high, that is the height necessary to exit the moons gravitational pull, which i think no man, even with 1/6 of the earth's pull, can leap 2.3 kilometers into the air, such a thought is preposterous, an estimate as the average human can leap 2ft into the air, the highest an average human can leap on the moon would be about..... 12ft, as if you know your measures, that is nowhere near 2.3 kilometers. The only moon in our solar system on which you can do that, is one of Mar's moons, Deimos, on which you can literally jump off of the moon with a running jump. I hope that was what you meant, as I don't really understand your question. :/
Yes they will because they get old and fall off
Because the tree can't hang on to the apples for ever..
No, the flag on the moon did not fall when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin took off. There is no atmosphere on the moon, so there was no wind to cause the flag to fall. However, the momentum from the astronauts handling the flag may have caused it to swing back and forth.
No. Very similar to if you tried walking around the Earth.
It's called "If I Ever Fall in Love Again" by Shai released in 1992 off of the album 'If I ever fall in Love'
No. It would fall through the moon.