Something like the image in the link below
That has an easy answer: Carl Sagan was a scientist, not an astronaut. He did not go to the moon.
Earth because on the moon you would weigh one sixth
Michael Collins, who orbited around the moon in the command module.
An astronaut on the Moon - or any of the Moon residents, starting about 30 years from now - would see a solar eclipse where we here on Earth see a lunar eclipse.
The patches on the moon are the crators, the crators have shadows which make the craters darker. Which makes the moon appear patchy.
The astronaut's inertia is MORE on the moon.
No. No astronaut has been to the Moon since 1972,
The astronaut floated weightlessly in the spacecraft, looking down at the Earth below.
Neil Armstrong was the first astronaut to walk on the moon
The astronaut's mass is the same on the moon but the gravitational force applied on the astronaut is weaker thus the astronaut appears to weigh less.
The first astronaut to set foot on the moon was the American astronaut Neil Armstrong in the Apollo 11.
Neil Armstrong is a famous astronaut who landed on the moon.
The first astronaut to land on the moon was Neil Armstrong. Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin were the first men to walk on the moon.
An astronaut.
It was astronaut Eugene cernan, in Apollo 17
The astronaut on the Moon will be in free-fall round the Earth, just like the rocks round him/her and all the rest of the Moon as well. So the astronaut won't feel any force.
How long can the astronaut stay on the moon?