Hear no, feel yes. One might feel them as a "moonquake".
because that is rocket
No, a spaceship traveling to the moon would not produce a shock wave in the traditional sense. Shock waves are typically generated by objects traveling faster than the speed of sound in a medium, and in the vacuum of space, there is no medium for the shock wave to propagate through.
The Shock Wave was created in 1994.
You hear thunder after seeing lightning because lightning produces intense heat that causes the air to rapidly expand and create a shock wave. This shock wave is what we hear as thunder. The distance between you and the lightning strike can affect the time gap between seeing the lightning and hearing the thunder.
Sound is a compression/rarefaction wave in a material, such as air. There is no such thing on the moon.
I have problem unresponsive plug in shock wave.
Shock Wave - novel - has 537 pages.
Shock Wave - novel - was created on 1996-01-02.
A shock wave from a supernova is called nothing more than a "shock wave". You might be looking for "gamma ray burst" but that has nothing to do with a "shock wave". See related link for more information on Gamma ray bursts.
Thunder is formed when lightning rapidly heats the air around it, causing the air to expand very quickly and create a shock wave. This shock wave is what we hear as thunder. The sound of thunder can travel for several miles depending on atmospheric conditions.
Shock Wave - Brean Leisure Park - was created in 2004.
No, a spaceship traveling into the moon would not produce a shockwave because there is no atmosphere on the moon for the shockwave to propagate through. Shockwaves need a medium like air or water to travel through, so in the vacuum of space or on the airless moon, a shockwave would not be generated as the spaceship impacts the surface.