Yes. They can hit anywhere on the moon.
yes they do that is why there is craters
well the last 3 years there has been more than 5,000 meteors hit in the moon but now its been estimated to pass 1.2 millions smalls meteors so fast that mad a couple cracks on the moon
763476376347894658937802020203487560385746
Do they? I don't believe this is known. I have not been able to find any real estimate for the numbers of meteorites hitting the Moon or the Earth so a comparison is kind of unwarranted.However, I would expect more meteorites to hit the Moon than the Earth *per unit surface area* because the Moon has very little atmosphere. A lot of meteors hit the Earth's atmosphere without ever reaching the Earth's surface because they burn up in the air. The Moon has no such protective covering and so will be hit by all the meteors that head its way.
Meteors, comets, and asteroids can hit the Moon with the force of many atomic bombs, causing debris to splash out of the craters and form gray streaks called rays.
yes they do that is why there is craters
meteors hit them
This is because meteors hit the moon and cause craters.
well the last 3 years there has been more than 5,000 meteors hit in the moon but now its been estimated to pass 1.2 millions smalls meteors so fast that mad a couple cracks on the moon
763476376347894658937802020203487560385746
it has been hit with many meteors
The spots are craters left over from meteors that hit the moon.
it has been hit with many meteors
No, Earth has some craters, but not as many because Earth has an atmosphere to destroy or smallen meteors, but the moon does not, so it is hit by meteors more3 often.
because it has a more gravity and it pulls it towards the moon
Flying debris in space, such as meteors, hit the moon and it forms craters.
Those dark patches are craters from meteors that hit the moon.