good night moon!
The Milky Way is a band of at least 200 billion distant stars and is a part of our galaxy,
This is an example of an alliteration 'moon made'. For it to be a metaphor it would have to follow this sort of structure, 'the moon was a torch in the sky'. Hope this helped.
We would say that the moon is the secondbrightest, after the sun.
Over the long run, the Moon doesn't interfere with observations of distant stars and galaxies. On any particular night, there will be an area of the sky in which the bright moonlight (especially when full or near-full) will wash out the background stars. This is because Earth's atmosphere scatters light and diffuses the glow across the sky somewhat. But last night, or tomorrow night, the Moon was/will be in a different area of the sky and our observations won't be affected. For a professional astronomer who is planning an observation of a distant object, it's important to schedule the observation for a time when the Moon isn't in that area of the sky. Fortunately, the apparent motions of the Moon are precisely predictable.
The moon looks bright due to its size because of its closeness to Earth in comparison to very distant stars and planets combined with reflected sunlight.
No, stars in the night sky are not like the moon. Stars are distant suns that emit their light, while the moon reflects the light of the sun. Stars appear as small points of light, whereas the moon is a larger, closer celestial body that can be seen in different phases.
A star is too large to fit between the earth and the moon and/or so massive that it would tear apart the earth and moon before it got there. If there were a star between the earth and the moon, there would be nobody around to know it.
The moon isn't located in the sky - It is actually in space and rotates around the Earth. If you are talking about its location in where you can see it in the sky at a certain time, say the time in your question.
A distant meadow
I'd have to say the first scientist who saw the moon was the first one to look up in the sky...
Moon = Cheese + Sky
the colour of sky from the moon is blak as there is no atmosphere .