No. The moon is closer to Earth than Mars is, but it orbits Earth independent of the motion of Mars. Sometimes the moon may appear right next to Mars in the sky while at other times it may be opposite Mars.
Sometimes. Remember that the moon is revolving the Earth.
Venus and Mars
Our moon is, you know, orbits the Earth, and Mar's moon orbits around Mars. Simple.
No, it does not. The earth has a moon, and Mars does not. It is earth's moon, earth and the sun that are involved in eclipses. All of them. Without a moon, Mars cannot experience an eclipse.
mars and the moon is not a planet
earth has but one moon
The Earth's distance from the moon or Mars is always changing. The closest the moon can get to Earth is 225,622 miles. The farthest it can get is 252,088 miles. The closest possible distance from Earth to Mars is 33.9 million miles. Therefore the Earth is always much closer to the moon than Mars, no matter where they are in orbit.
No, Mars is much larger than Earth's moon.
Without a telescope you probably couldn't see earth's moon from Mars.
Mars is tremendously farther away from the Earth than the moon is.
It is believed that the moon was created by a collision between proto-Earth and a Mars-sized planet. The moon was formed from accreted Earth collision material.
The moonMoon is the closet celestial body.
The Moon. After that, it could be Venus or Mars, depending on their orbits. The distance between the Earth and Mars/ Venus changes.