Full Moon
No. None of the lunar surface is visible from Earth during the New Moon phase.
the holes in the moons surface are where astroids hit the moons surface
because the moon always moves
you should Google it and look it up on wiki answers PEN!S
Full moon
This is the first quarter phase. The moon looks half lit, half in shadow, but you actually can only see one quarter of the moons surface at this point (during a full moon, you would only be able to see half of the moons surface - the half that faces us).
No. None of the lunar surface is visible from Earth during the New Moon phase.
the holes in the moons surface are where astroids hit the moons surface
A solar eclipse can only occur during a new moon, which is the only lunar phase when the moon is positioned between the Earth and the sun.
because the moon always moves
because the moon always moves
The moon has plenty of gravity. In accordance with its mass and radius, any object weighs about 16.5% as much on the moon's surface as it does on the Earth's surface.
yea
The stage just before a full moon is called the waxing gibbous phase. During this phase, the moon is more than half illuminated but not fully yet.
you should Google it and look it up on wiki answers PEN!S
Full moon
The moons surface is made out of cheese