What changes from days to day is the amount of sunlight we see on the moon. As the moon orbits the earth and the earth orbits the sun, the sun hits the moon at a different angle in relation to the earth.
Thw moon doesn't change shape. It is an optical illusion caused by the moon's orbit around us and the way sunlight hits it. Since we can't see the "dark side" of the moon or the "far side" of the moon when it is full, it looks like the moon is changing shape.
No they are not
cuz The moon's apparent "shape" changes because as it orbits the Earth, the light from the sun hits it at different angles causing observers on Earth to see "different shaped moons". The moon really is always a sphere.
they do not shape shift. they phase into werewolves. shape shifting implies that they can change into anything. they can only phase into wolves. they can also phase whenever they want, not just on full moons.
The moon never changes shape only the light you can see.
Mars' moons are much smaller than, for example, Earth's Moon, or the larger moons of Jupiter. A large moon will have a larger gravity, which will tend to pull the moon together into a spherical shape.
no
they do not change shapes,whenthey relax and contract we feel and see then moving.
With a telescope
He saw 4 moons
Yes, it is possible to see Jupiter's four largest moons, known as the Galilean moons, with just a pair of binoculars or even with the naked eye. These moons are Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.
Some planets in our solar system with two or more moons include Jupiter (79 moons), Saturn (82 moons), Uranus (27 moons), and Neptune (14 moons). These moons vary in size, shape, and characteristics, and they play important roles in the dynamics of their respective planet's systems.