Is this even a question? No.
No, the moon comes out at a much earlier time then when the sky turns dark. This is due to the orbit of the moon. The moon is visible in the sky during the day. So, no the sky does not turn absolutely dark when the moon comes out. If it did, then we would have extremely long nights.
No, the moon is not always dark. It reflects light from the sun, so it appears bright in the night sky.
Because it is a shadow of the moon and the sky
It appears completely dark during the new moon phase.
Yes. A formal definition of "Dark of the moon" is: 1. The period of about a week at the time of a new moon when the moon's light is absent from the sky. 2. A period when the moon is not shining or when it is obscured
It wouldn't be dark anymore...
A full moon appears as a dark circle in the night sky on certain days, caused by the shadow of the Earth falling on it during a lunar eclipse.
Technically speaking, when you cannot see the moon, it is a new moon. But my thinking is that if you can't see the moon, how can it be new? So my definition of a new moon is when you can see a smile in the sky because the moon is happy that it has just been born, but when you see a frown in the sky, the moon is sad because it is dying. Then you get the scientific "new moon."
The sky itself does not actually change, but the human eye adjusts to the higher light level with a contraction of the pupil, which makes the sky look darker, when the moon appears.
The blueness of the earth's sky is due to the sunlight passing through the atmosphere. There is no atmosphere on the moon, so the sky appears black. The sky is not filled with stars during the day on the moon, with the sun in the sky it is far too bright to see the stars.
Yes, a new moon is not visible in the night sky because it is located between the Earth and the Sun, with its dark side facing us.
The moon is basically black, but occasionally you can see a dark gray circle against the black sky.