It doesn't - the moon's proximity to Earth has no bearing on Earth's temperature - the Sun does that.
The moon is already close to the earth
The Earth's gravity holds the Moon in its orbit.
the temperature of the earth is lower than the Earth.
the moon gets farther and closer to the sun than the earth because as you should know the planets roatate and when the moon of the earth is directed at the sun it is hotter than the earth because it is closer to the moon. and when the moon is on the oppsite side it is colder than the earth because the sun is farther away than the earth.
Not really.
because it is close to earth
Nothing happens to the temperature during a lunar eclipse. Nothing ishappening on Earth during a lunar eclipse. It's the moon that's goingthrough the Earth's shadow and becoming dimmer.(But I'll bet you the temperature on the moon sure changes when that happens.)
moon
It was not especially close; the perigee distance is 363,104 km. The Moon orbits the Earth in an elliptical path, and it comes that close to Earth every month. But the orbital cycle isn't on the same schedule as the phases of the Moon. The Moon happens to be exactly full at the very same time as the Moon reaches perigee only once every 28 years or so.
The moon's average distance from earth is listed as 238,855.7 miles (384,401 km).
Because the Earth is rotating :D
because the Earth has more of an atmosphere, and the Moon does not. the atmoshpere holds in heat and cold, so on the moon there is not anything to keep the temperature stable