No. The only body in the solar system that radiates its own light is the Sun. All other bodies in the Solar System , especially including the Moon, shine only by reflected sunlight.
No. The moon does not produce any light of its own. It only reflects light from the sun. It does not have enough mass to ignite nuclear fusion, nor is it of the right composition. Finally, nuclear fusion and combustion are two completely different processes.
The sun produces light through nuclear fusion in its core. This intense process generates energy in the form of light and heat, which is radiated outwards into space, reaching Earth and providing us with sunlight.
The moon in no way produces light. It reflects light from the sun.
The moon does not emit light waves. It reflects light from the sun. The sun, light bulb, and campfire emit light waves through processes like nuclear fusion or combustion.
The sun produces its own light when it transforms hydrogen into helium. The moon gets its light from the sun. It doesn't produce light. The brightness that we see on the moon is a reflection of the sunlight.
The sun produces its own light when it transforms hydrogen into helium. The moon gets its light from the sun. It doesn't produce light. The brightness that we see on the moon is a reflection of the sunlight.
No it does not it gets its light from the reflection of the sun Yes, the moon does reflect light from the sun however the moon doesn't produce it's own light.
The moon is a solid rock that reflects the sun's light back to Earth. It does not under go wither fission or fusion.
The moon looks like it produces light for the same reason that your mirror looks like it is producing your face when you look at it. It turns out that the moon has a high enough albedo (reflectivity) that it reflects enough sunlight to appear to be lighted up.
because of total internal reflection of light on the earth's atmosphere
Stars do not reflect light from the Moon or the Sun. Stars emit their own light due to nuclear fusion reactions happening in their cores. The light we see from stars is the result of this emission, not reflection.
The energy of the sun comes from nuclear fusion occurring in the sun's core. The moon does not have an internal energy source. What little energy falls on it comes from the sun.