stop asking lame questions
no idea help me please i need to type this for homework and i cant remember what the shape of the moon was. i know yesterday there was a half moon but before that i didn't have time to look. can someone answer my question please or I'm gonna get into big trouble.
This answer differentiates depending on your location. In the California area, the moon set around 5:00 A.M.
exactly 15:06 in the morning
I am not exactly sure about NASA and all of that. But, I know 12 men have walked on the moon.
The rotation of the moon, or the time it takes to rotate on it's axis exactly once, is 27.322 days (rounded), and the moon's orbital period, or the time the moon takes to complete one full revolution around the Earth, is exactly the same. That's why the Moon appears to always show the same face. We see the same side of the moon and never get to view the far side from Earth.
no idea help me please i need to type this for homework and i cant remember what the shape of the moon was. i know yesterday there was a half moon but before that i didn't have time to look. can someone answer my question please or I'm gonna get into big trouble.
look at it and decide whether it is full or not work out what it is and then look at the calender that will tell you exactly what the month of the year is and the week of the month and the day of the week
This answer differentiates depending on your location. In the California area, the moon set around 5:00 A.M.
They are exactly the same.
maybe,if you know your moon phrases and it repeats its self exactly the same every single time
We would prefer that you not be driving a car, but other than that it is not unsafe to look at the moon at any time.
exactly 2pm
exactly 15:06 in the morning
I am not exactly sure about NASA and all of that. But, I know 12 men have walked on the moon.
Time for Yesterday has 320 pages.
Time for Yesterday was created in 1988-04.
The moon's orbit is not exactly in the same plane as the Earth and sun are. So at the time of Full Moon, the Earth's shadow is usually above or below the Moon, and misses it. And at the time of New Moon, the Moon's shadow is usually above or below the Earth, and misses it.