Yes. The moon is made mostly of rock but has a small nickel-iron core.
Yes, the moon is composed of rock.
None of Jupiter's Galilean moons are composed mostly of nitrogen. Ganymede is primarily composed of water ice, while Callisto, Europa, and Io are composed of a mix of rock and ice. Nitrogen is more commonly found in the atmosphere of Titan, a moon of Saturn.
The moon is primarily made of rock and metal, with a surface composition that includes minerals like feldspar, pyroxenes, and olivine. It lacks a significant atmosphere and is mostly composed of silicate rocks.
The moon is mostly made of a type of rock called anorthosite, which is composed of plagioclase feldspar. This gives the moon its distinctive light-colored appearance in contrast to Earth's darker rocks. Additionally, the moon's surface also contains other rock types such as basalt and breccia.
No Mars is composed mostly of rock. The atmosphere is very thin.
Igneous rock.
No. There is some dust on the moon's surface, but the moon is mostly solid rock.
Mostly ice and rock. ;)
The bulk of the Earth is composed of rock.
Mount Pinatubo is mostly composed of dacite.
The bulk of the Earth is composed of rock.
Ganymede is the largest moon in the solar system, about 8% larger than Earth's Moon. Ganymede is also larger than the planet Mercury. It has a thin atmosphere, a magnetic field, and is composed mostly of rock and water ice.