2,160 miles
The moon measures 2,160 miles across. It was figured out by the first astronauts to set out on the moon on the Apollo 11, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong.
If you are asking how far the Moon is from the Earth, the easy answer is about 250,000 miles or 400,000 kilometers. If you want to know how long is the orbit of the Moon (the length of its journey around the Earth each month) then the answer is roughly 1,570,000 miles or 2,528,000 kilometers.
The moon is about 2160 across along the equator. That's just a couple hundred miles short of the distance from the east to west coast of the United States.
The moon is about 2,160 miles across. Pluto is about 1,475 miles across, so Pluto is about 68% the diameter of our moon.
No. The moon is nowhere near that size. The moon is a little more than 2,100 miles across.
The moon measures about 2160 miles (3476 km) across. The distance is about one fourth the diameter of the Earth, and 400 times smaller than that of the sun.
Makemake has one known moon, an object about 100 miles across nicknamed MK-2.
A globe of rock about 2000 miles across and a quarter million miles away.
The Sun is about 950,000 miles across. The Moon is about 2,160 miles across. Coincidentally, they LOOK the same size! The apparent diameter of the Sun is very nearly the same as the apparent diameter of the Moon, which is what makes eclipses so interesting. This is because the Sun is 93,000,000 miles away, while the Moon is only 250,000 miles away.
Greensboro to the moon in miles by spaceship
The moon is approximately 240,000 miles from earth.
Charon measures 1,172 km across, about half the diameter of Pluto.