No. Not at all.
Cold war. We went to the moon to demonstrate who could throw the largest hydrogen bomb the farthest distance the most accurately, without actually having to throw one. Neil was our stand-in for that imaginary hydrogen bomb.
Land men on the moon and return them safely to earth by the end of the decade. This was the "public" goal declared by president Kennedy. However the underlying secret goal was to demonstrate which country could throw the largest hydrogen bomb possible the farthest distance and hit a target accurately - without having to actually throw a real hydrogen bomb (and risk starting a war). By getting men to the moon we proved we could deliver any possible hydrogen bomb anywhere we wanted to put it on earth.
Land men on the moon and return them safely to earth by the end of the decade. This was the "public" goal declared by president Kennedy. However the underlying secret goal was to demonstrate which country could throw the largest hydrogen bomb possible the farthest distance and hit a target accurately - without having to actually throw a real hydrogen bomb (and risk starting a war). By getting men to the moon we proved we could deliver any possible hydrogen bomb anywhere we wanted to put it on earth.
Land men on the moon and return them safely to earth by the end of the decade. This was the "public" goal declared by president Kennedy. However the underlying secret goal was to demonstrate which country could throw the largest hydrogen bomb possible the farthest distance and hit a target accurately - without having to actually throw a real hydrogen bomb (and risk starting a war). By getting men to the moon we proved we could deliver any possible hydrogen bomb anywhere we wanted to put it on earth.
the moon is a small rocky planetoid that orbits the earth the sun is a huge sphere of plasma that has a core of fuseing hydrogen basicly a great ball of fire!!!!!!!!!
It depends how big the explosion is. A stick of dynamite exploding on the moon would obviously not be visible to a naked eye on Earth, but a 100 Megaton hydrogen bomb might be.
The space race of the 1960s which lead to the Apollo moon landings was a cold war exercise to demonstrate which country could throw the largest hydrogen bomb, the farthest distance, the most accurately, without having to actually throw a hydrogen bomb (because once one hydrogen bomb was thrown for real the other side would throw its own and there might be nobody left to decide the winner). The US won this cold war exercise when it landed on the moon in 1969 and the USSR conceded but claimed to have never been interested in participating (but CIA spy satellite photos prove otherwise, it is just that they were unable to successfully build their Saturn V class rocket needed for them to reach the moon).
The tide is controlled by the moon
Not as far as we know.
tides are controlled by the gravitational pull of the moon
Apollo proved that the United States could throw a bigger hydrogen bomb, farther and more accurately, without actually having to throw one, than any other country at the time.
Very little. It mostly proved that the US could throw the largest hydrogen bomb the furthest distance the most accurately, without actually having to throw one at someone.