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Yes, the shadow of the moon is always long enough to to reach the earth. In fact the shadow is long enough to reach the earths core.
One, if they're tall enough!
One, if it is long enough. Enough already with the "How many foolish things would it take to reach a planet?" questions. This answers them all.
The second person to reach the moon was Edwin Eugene.
it takes 3 days to reach the moon
Yes, the shadow of the moon is always long enough to to reach the earth. In fact the shadow is long enough to reach the earths core.
One, if they're tall enough!
One, if it is long enough. Enough already with the "How many foolish things would it take to reach a planet?" questions. This answers them all.
just one if he/she is long enough
The Apollo missions' were based around the Saturn V rocket - the only rocket ever flown that was powerful enough to reach the moon.
Yes you can reach the moon, if you have a rocket as powerful as Saturn 5.
The moon does has its own orbit around this planet, believe it or not. The moon does have its own gravitational pull strong enough so it won't go crashing into the Earth , yet not that strong to break out of Earth's gravitational reach to the moon.
The second person to reach the moon was Edwin Eugene.
it takes 3 days to reach the moon
100 trillion
The bright side of the moon will reach temperatures of about 230 degrees Fahrenheit. The melting point of all rocks is about 2192 degrees Fahrenheit So, the moon never gets hot enough.
It took roughly three days to reach the moon.