No. Neither the Hubble or any Earth telescope can see anything on the Moon that is less than one hundred feet across. The LRO took some very interesting pictures of the Apollo sites, though, some of them clear enough you could see the pads on the LM, the trails the astronauts left in the soil, etc.
TheLunar Roving Vehicle [See Link] or lunar roveror moon buggy was a type of surface exploration go-cart used on the Moon during the Apollo program.
No you can not see it with your naked eye.
Then we see full moons. If the Earth passes PRECISELY between the Sun and the Moon, then we see a lunar eclipse.
No, they see night-time. You can see a lunar eclipse (from anywhere) when the MOON is in the earth's umbra.
If you are referring to lunar phases, there are two phases in which the moon is not visible to the earth. In the New Moon and Dark Moon lunar phases, the moon is not visible to those on earth. See related links for more information.
TheLunar Roving Vehicle [See Link] or lunar roveror moon buggy was a type of surface exploration go-cart used on the Moon during the Apollo program.
You see a lunar eclipse ONLY if the Moon enters Earth's shadow.
No you can not see it with your naked eye.
Three. Four lunar rovers were built, one for each Apollo mission 15, 16, and 17 [See Link]. The other one was used for spare parts after the cancellation of further Apollo missions
All previous Mars probes could only see the part of Mars directly around them. The Rovers, by moving around, were able to see and investigate much, much more. Do not confuse the Mars rover robots with the Apollo Lunar Rovers which were basically a dune buggy for the astronauts to drive around the Moon. This let them also see and investigate much much more. One lunar rover went over 17 miles!
the moon
Use the link below and you'll see a good one.
Then we see full moons. If the Earth passes PRECISELY between the Sun and the Moon, then we see a lunar eclipse.
We do not see those because the sun and the moon are in a line.
lunar eclipse which is the moon blocking the sun
When you see a lunar eclipse, it's always at night on your part of the earth. -- A lunar eclipse can only occur at the exact time of the Full Moon. -- The Full Moon is visible only in the night sky. So obviously, if you are in a place where you can see the Full Moon, then you are in a place where you can see a lunar eclipse if one is in progress, and it is night-time where you are.
There is no similarities between them...a lunar eclipse occurs when the moon passes through the shadow of the earth..you see the dark side of the moon during a new moon.