Via rocket.
The Apollo program was designed to land humans on the Moon and bring them safely back to Earth.
No, humans weigh less on the Moon than on Earth because the Moon has less gravity. The gravitational force on the Moon is about 1/6th of the gravitational force on Earth, so a person would weigh less on the Moon compared to Earth.
The moon will never be planet earth. The moon only has as half of gravity then earth. The moon doesn't even have oxygen. If the moon were to become earth us humans would just die. Plus, the moon doesn't even have water. We humans need water to live. We'd just die.
No one lives on the moon, because it is inhabitable and humans have not created technology to survive on the moon permanently. Scientists may stay there for a few days, but are unable to live there for a long period of time. But, they go back to Earth in the same thing they came to the moon with of course, which is a rocket.
Yes, I can. -- Complete list of planets that humans have visited: Earth -- Complete list of other bodies outside of earth that humans have visited: The Moon.
Humans have orbited the moon. When they were around the "back", they were about 240,000 miles from the earth. That's the record so far.
The Moon is the only place exception Earth where humans have gone.
The moon is in Earth's shadow during a lunar eclipse. Earth doesn't have a definite front or back.
Everything has gravity. Your weight on the moon is about 16 percent of what it is on Earth.
Humans inhabiting Earth never see the dark side of the moon. The reason humans can never view this side of the moon is because the time it takes for the Moon to rotate once is the same amount of time it takes for it to orbit around the Earth. Therefore, humans will never see the dark side of the moon.
Rocks were brought back to the Earth from the various Moon landings the Americans undertook. No other rocks from the Moon are on Earth. The Moon was formed from the Earth - so, if anything, there are Earth rocks on the Moon.
The main purpose of the Apollo space program was to land humans on the Moon and bring them back safely to Earth. It was part of the broader goal of the United States to demonstrate technological and scientific superiority during the Cold War space race with the Soviet Union.