Under View > Explore in main menu of Google Earth there is a list of views to choose from: Earth, Moon, Mars, and Sky.
When you select Moon special layers will be available in the layers panel such as Apollo Missions to see the Moon landings.
go under Tools in the top of the computer and click: "enter flight simulator"
In cca 13 kilometers above Earth
No. An airplane is not designed to fly out of the Earth's atmosphere, only a space rocket has the ability to fly to other celestial bodies and space stations.
The u2 spy plane it can fly so high you and see the curveture of the earth
press together: ctrl alt A
An airplane, by definition, flies in the air, it does not fly in outer space where there is no air. So an airplane cannot fly from Earth to Mars. That requires a spaceship. With current technology, a spaceship might reach Mars in about a year. It's a long trip.
Can you fly on airplane with pericarditis
Planes fly in the atmosphere above the surface of the earth called the stratosphere.
Yes, an earthquake cant affect the air flight
The explicit fly-to tab that existed in Google Earth 6.1 (and earlier versions) has been removed in Google Earth 6.2 and replaced with a simpler/more powerful interface.Typing in an address or coordinates then clicking search or pressing enter will automatically fly to that location.
Fly to Australia and get directions on Google maps or Google Earth.
The new Google Earth 6.2 has the search fly-to interface completely redone. It no longer has an explicit fly-to as did previous versions of Google Earth. Search now automatically flies when the search results are returned. If one result then it jumps to that location; if multiple results then flies to the center of the view to see them all.
You can start by entering an address (or just a city name) in the fly-to search panel and see Google Earth zoom to that location. Next check out the Google Earth user's guide (which includes video tutorials) and see what else Google Earth can do.