yes, the earth only has one moon.
If they're looking at it at the same time, you'd probably have to take photographs and compare them to tell the difference... there would be a difference, since the angles wouldn't be exactly the same, but not much of one because the Moon is so far away the angles are very nearly the same.
Yes they do
Just like the sun the moon rises and sets...so as the earth rotates you see the same moon and the same sun it's just when the sun is on one part of the earth you see the moon and vice versa..... Comment: I can't say that helps much, but I will not delete that answer. This is my answer: People see the same side of the Moon because gravity has locked the Moon's rotation period at the same length of time as the time the Moon takes to complete one orbit of the Earth. If you think about it, that means we must always see the same side of the Moon.
yes
Yes.
europe africa
The Moon spins at the same rate that it orbits the Earth; once every 27 days. Because of that, the same side of the Moon always faces the Earth. Before the Soviet Luna space probes which took photos of the far side of the Moon, no one had ever known what it looked like. People of India cannot see the far side of the Moon? The People of EARTH cannot see the far side of the Moon.
sun and moon different sun bigger, farther, hotter, heavier, brighter than moon sun all gas, moon all rock people been to moon, no people been to sun you can see moon day or night, but you can't see sun at night
Yes. The moon spins at just the right speed so that the same face always faced the Earth.
No, we see the same side of the moon as it orbits and goes through phases because the moon rotates at the same rate it orbits.
We can't always.... when it's the New Moon (the moon is between us and the Sun), we can't see it at all. However, as the moon orbits Earth, we can see it in the day or night sky. We see it well THEN, because it's only about 235,000 miles from Earth and 1/4 of Earth's size - about the size of Africa.
same one