No, because the Moon has no atmosphere.
Yes you Can
You could! There's not very much available atmosphere for that method to be very effective.
No atmosphere-no weather.
No, because weather attributed to the atmosphere.
Because it has no atmosphere and no water. The only weather is the heating from the sun during the lunar day and the cooling from the lunar night.
The moon will go orange/red during a lunar eclipse, as the earths atmosphere distores the light from the sun.
NASA has launched the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) and the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) satellites to the moon. LRO is tasked with mapping the lunar surface, while LADEE studies the moon's thin atmosphere and dust.
The lunar surface gets extremely hot in the daylight because there is no atmosphere to regulate the temperature. The surface absorbs a lot of sunlight and then retains that heat due to the lack of an atmosphere to conduct or convect it away. This leads to the surface temperature rising significantly during the lunar day.
The Moon has almost no atmosphere, so that is unable to influence lunar gravity - which is about one sixth of Earth's gravity.
During a lunar eclipse with no atmosphere on Earth, the moon would appear dark and reddish due to the sunlight refracted by the Earth's atmosphere. Without the atmosphere, the moon would not have the red hue and would instead appear darker and possibly slightly illuminated by sunlight passing through the Earth's shadow.
In both lunar rocks and the atmosphere of Venusthe Argon 40/argon 36 ratio is 1:1 while in the atmosphere of Earth argon 40 is 99.6%
Rocket ships are vehicles made to operate outside of Earth's atmosphere. Some of the lunar missions also had a lunar rover that was basically a car for the moon where there is no air to run an engine, so it was electrically powered.