not with your bear eye. the little craters are microscopic
They are called dimples.
Moon rocks are unique in that they have tiny craters, and even tinier craters within those tiny craters. And within those tiny craters within the tiny craters are even tinier craters. This is due to micrometers which do not reach the earth's surface. It's also a result of large meteors splattering small pieces of moon regolith as secondary meteors. None of this is possible on earth. The similarity between moon rocks and earth rocks is that they are basically feldspars and basalt, the same thing that makes up the earth's crust.
Because of the shadows cast by the craters.
The theory is that these are impact craters of meteors.
It wont have a name, there will be billions of tiny craters on mercury.
There can be craters anywhere on the moon, not just the side we see
there is a large amount of fruit acid in mentos , so when you react it with another acid they will combine and cause a reaction: if you put a mentos in a can of soda it will erupt, explode, ect. like an explosive volcano due to the fact of the acid. Above answer is completely wrong, there are tiny nucleation sites on the mentos where the CO2 of the soda's carbonation turns to real gas and fizzes up through the tiny opening. as a result of all the bubbles, the soda literally is pushed up and out of the bottle into a soda geyser.
See the link below.
Anyone can see craters on the moon. All you have to do is look at it when it's in the sky. There are billions of craters on the lunar surface with more being added almost daily. There will always be craters on the moon because there is no atmosphere to erode them. The lunar craters only form of erosion is from solar bombardment and being hit by another object.
The pits on Mentos candies are referred to as "pockmarks." These tiny dimples or pits are created during the manufacturing process and play a key role in the candy's interaction with carbonated beverages. When Mentos are dropped into soda, the pockmarks facilitate rapid gas release, leading to the iconic geyser effect.
Yes, the craters on the moon are primarily formed by impacts from meteoroids, asteroids, and comets. These collisions occurred throughout the moon's history due to its lack of atmosphere to protect it from incoming objects.
it is 100% full and it shows alot of its craters so you can use a telescope and see its craters.