No. The moon is a lump of rock shaped by gravity.
A spinning cloud of gases typically refers to a phenomenon in space where gases, such as hydrogen and helium, are coalescing due to gravitational forces. This process can lead to the formation of stars or planets as the spinning cloud of gases slowly collapses and heats up.
In some cases, the moons were created from the same swirling space-dust as their planets were. In the case of Luna, Earth's moon, it is most likely that it was hurled out of Earth itself when Earth was struck by a gigantic asteroid.
the big rain cloud is the cloud that makes big rain.
Venus has no moons.
there are 63 moons and 4 of them are big
no moons but have big craters
They're fairly big for moons, although Jupiter itself is big. The four "Galilean" moons of Jupiter were the first "moons" other than our own Moon to be seen, by Galileo using his new telescope.
Mars has two very tiny moons. Jupiter and Saturn also have lots of small moons, but they also have lots of big moons.
As big as the container it is in.
Because it is big
Uranus has at least 27 moons that we know of.
The biggest moon is "Ganymede" which is a moon of Jupiter.