About 27-1/2 days.
No but the earth does go around for a year wich is 365 days but the moon only mooves for 28 days
You cannot go to the moon by car. There are no roads in the sky.
-- The moon you see in our sky is nowhere near Jupiter. It revolves around the Earth once every 29.53 days. -- As of right now (early 2012), we know of 66 moons that revolve around Jupiter. Their orbital periods range from 7 hours to 982 days.
If the Moon is in the southwestern sky at sunset, then you are in the northern hemisphere, and the Moon is in the waxing crescent phase. You can probably guess, within one day, how many days "old" the Moon is, in days after the new moon. If the Moon is straight south at sunset, then it was 7 days old at first quarter; if it was southwest, it was about 3-4 days past the new.
Yes. A moon revolves around a planet, which is also around a sky. Stars are balls of gas in the sky.
The moon can be seen somewhere in the sky, at some time, on 27 or 28 days out of every 30 .
the moon is not a fixed point in the sky it orbits around the earth like the earth orbits around the sun the moon is not in geometric orbit meaning that it rotates around the the earth it takes about 28 days for the moon to orbit the earth so the moon will be up during the day time about 14 days out of every 28 days
No, the moon is not falling from the sky. It orbits around the Earth due to gravitational forces.
3 days ago, the moon was likely in its waxing crescent phase, with only a small sliver of the moon visible in the evening sky.
The period of the complete cycle of phases of the moon is about 29 days. So, exactly 15 days after the moment of Full Moon, it will have just passed New Moon. If you can see it at all at that time, it will be the skinniest possible crescent, very close to the sun in the sky.
A full moon occurs approximately every 29.5 days, which is the time it takes for the moon to complete one orbit around the Earth. Therefore, you can expect to see a full moon about once a month.
the moon is in the outer space and revolving around the earth in an orbit.