I don't know exactly what a lunar moth is, but if it's anything like a normal moth, then it will be much flatter when you stick it between a calendar.
Synemon plana
The Moon completes an orbital revolution around the earth in 27.32 days, and it displays a complete cycle of 'phases' in about 29.53 days, which is approximately a month. (More precisely 29.53059 days.)
(The following is from information on the nasa.gov website: [-Doctor Dan]) The Enterprise was the first shuttle, but was used for testing of various types to prove out the theories for the rest of the shuttle fleet later. It rolled out Sept. 17, 1976 and given to Smithsonian for display in 1985. Following the Enterprise, the orbiter Columbia was created and it became the first Space Shuttle to fly into Earth orbit in 1981. Four sister ships joined the fleet over the next 10 years: Challenger arrived in 1982 but destroyed four years later. Discovery, 1983. Atlantis, 1985. and Endeavour, built as a replacement for Challenger in 1991. The first man in space was not Alan Sheppard as many think, but Yuri Gagarin of the USSR. The Soviets built five shuttles also, but only one of them achieved orbit and reentry. The program was shut down and the shuttles moth-balled upon the collapse of the Soviet Union. One was destroyed in the collapse the hanger in which it was stored. The other four were "donated" to museums in different countries.
No, Mercury can only be seen briefly in the evening (just after sunset) OR morning (just before sunrise) sky when it is in positions visible form Earth. Think of a moth flying around a street-light, and you're standing 1/2 mile away trying to see it. It's so small, and always so close to the bright light, that it's tough for you to pick it out of the glare. Mercury isn't much bigger than Earth's moon, and its orbit is the smallest of the known planets. From where we are, it always appears so close to the sun that it never rises until just a short time before the sun, and it always sets just a short time after the sun. It's tiny, and it's never up when the sky is good and dark, so it's always tough to pick it out of the sun's glare.
Where in space, and how powerful a telescope are you using?There's an urban legend that you can see the Great Wall of China with the naked eye from the Moon. You can't, not even close. It's difficult bordering on impossible to see it with the naked eye from the International Space Station, which is much much closer to Earth than the Moon is.What you can see fairly readily if you're as close as the ISS is large straight lines in contrasting colors. The US Interstate Highway system is possible to pick out in places, as are some canals (one astronaut who thought he could see the Great Wall discovered, when he used binoculars, that he was actually seeing an irrigation canal). Large-scale irrigation projects are visible.From the Moon or further... pretty much bupkis without a telescope.
What I think is the caterpillar of a lunar moth is munching on my gardenia bush.
July.
hi there i eat a spider
It cant fly and it will die...
5 ~ 6 weeks
No. They are a common species over much of the eastern united states.
extremely. I had two lunar moths in my place of business during the lunar months and I made well over what I had the year before
Like little brown balls the size of a pin head.
powdery one is the moth
The 9th month called Ramadhan, of the Islamic calendar is the whole moth of fasting for the Muslims.
"Leopard moth" can refer to several different species, depending on where you are. There is a type of carpenter worm moth called the leopard moth in Europe, and a type of tiger moth called the leopard moth in the US.
The spelling "moth" is a winged insect (Lepidoptera, along with butterflies).The "months" of the year in English are always capitalized:JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMayJuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovemberDecember