no
No, a candle can't burn on the moon if it's not in some kind of atmosphere containing oxygen. The moon really doesn't have any atmosphere, and that means no oxygen to support combustion of any kind.
There is no atmospheric oxygen on the moon. There is oxygen bound up in the regolith, most notably in the mineral ilmenite. The quantities are as yet unknown
By increasing it's mass to something similar to Venus or Earth.The Moon does not have enough mass to "hold" onto an atmosphere as it is blown away by stellar winds.
There is oxygen on the moon, but not as a gas. It is bound up chemically in minerals. Free oxygen, the gas, is not held to the moon as an atmosphere because the moon has not enough gravity to hold a noticeable atmosphere.
The moon does not have oxygen because it has a very thin atmosphere that cannot support the production or retention of oxygen. Additionally, the moon's lack of a magnetic field allows the solar wind to strip away any gases that do exist.
there is no oxygen or atmosphere
there is no oxygen or atmosphere
There is no atmosphere on the moon and no water.
Obviously the Earth has an atmosphere, and the moon also has one, although it is weaker and does not contain oxygen.
Obviously the Earth has an atmosphere, and the moon also has one, although it is weaker and does not contain oxygen.
Saturn's moon Dione has a thin oxygen atmosphere. Dione, which has large craters, is a relatively small moon, measuring 698 miles in diameter.
no. there is no atmosphere on the moon and fire needs oxygen to burn.