yes. every star is a sun. each star could possibly have its ownplanets orbitting it(like earth).
No because you are standing on a angle on the moon so you would not see more than one side of the earth
No.
Only one you can easily see
The one that you can see. Due to libation we can see slightly more than 50% of the moon from earth.
Yes. He thought the Earth was flat, but in 1964 astronauts realised that Earth was round Yes. The astronauts did report and see that the Earth was round and that there was more than one ocean.
When you can see more than one phase of the moon at the same time, it's likely a waxing gibbous or waning gibbous phase. This occurs when the moon is more than half illuminated but not fully full or new.
A heterogeneous mixture is a mixture in which you can see more than one phase.
Mercury is about less than half the size of the earth. Venus is about the same size. Mars is a little more than half the size of earth. Jupiter is more than 11 times larger than earth. Saturn is 9 times larger. Uranus is 4 times larger. Neptune is not quite 4 times larger. And poor Pluto, though no longer considered a planet, is one-fifth the size of earth. See Related Link, below.
You can see more than one half but less than all of the Moon's lighted side during the phases known as gibbous moons. This occurs when the Moon is more than half illuminated but less than fully illuminated by the Sun from our perspective on Earth.
No. We only see a tiny bit more than 1/2 of it. The rest of it has never been seen from Earth by human beings.
Your home is smaller than the earth but you can see it!
Because the Moon is tidally locked to the Earth. It is more massive on one sde than the other, and the more massive side is more strongly attracted by the Earth's gravity, so over time (some billions of years) the Moon's rotation has disappeared and it always presents one face to the Earth. The other side is sometimes called the 'dark side' but in fact it is no darker than the side we see. Everywhere the Sun rises and sets once in 28 days.