There are multiple opinions stated for this contention and the issue has been discussed by many persons. But yes, being in space is technically being on the moon.
A classic example of this is to use the quote: "If you live on the moon, then you live on the moon. If you live in space orbiting Jupiter, then yes, as a matter affect, you do still live technically on the moon." (Quote anonymous)
This FACTUAL article is PROOF that if this question was to provoke an argument between two individuals the one who was to put forward to opinion opposite to that of say, JESS, would indeed be correct , as usual.
SLAP BET WON.
The Moon
Technically the Moon has an atmosphere in the sense that space near the Moon isn't quite as hard a vacuum as interplanetary space generally, but it's not "just like Earth's": it's much, much thinner, for one thing, and a substantial portion of it is sodium and potassium vapor.
Absolutely NOT!Another AnswerThe Moon is in orbit around the Earth, while the Earth is in orbit (with its 7 siblings) around the Sun. These objects are in SPACE. Space is unimaginably large. All the galaxies we can see (and those we don't see), all the billions of stars in each of those galaxies, all the multiple-billions of planets orbiting those stars.... are all in space.
The moon is the closest thing in outer space to the earth.
because it is in space and every thing in space is weightless.
Nothing. In space, you can't here a thing. Do you think there's a difference on the moon? No.
He whent to space to descover more and more.Studeing the moon is like the best inportent thing some people say there is a creasher on the moon.
There is no such thing as weight in space seeing as there is no gravity.
Technically speaking you could send a potted tree inside a spaceship into space, however if you took it outside the spaceship it could not survive as there is no oxygen on the moon or in space in general that we know of.
The same thing that keeps you from floating out into space. Gravity.
Saturn's biggest moon is Titan, which is also the only known planetary satellite with an atmosphere.
No. Earth is technically the closest planet to the moon. Mars is the closest planet to a moon, with Phobos being only 9.4Mm away from Mars. Earth's moon is an average distance of 370Mm from Earth.