imagine being in a dark room and holding up a black ball, which you can't see. then you turn on a flashlight and shine it on the moon. you can see the part of the ball that the flashlight shines on but you can't see the other half. now walk around the ball withought getting in the light's way. when you are behind the ball, you can't see it at all. when you are to the side of the ball, you can see half of it. when you are in front of the ball, you can see the whole thing. the ball represents the moon, the flashlight is the sun, and you are the earth. technicaly the ball should be going around you and not you around the ball, but the same effect will happen. this is how moon phases work.
yes
The moons reflection from the Sun's light. The light hits the Earth so the viewer can see the moon.
No, the phases of Moon don't change.
the shape of the moon is caused by the movement of the earth. Earth's shadow causes the shapes. As the earth moves, so does its shadow, creating different shapes (phases).
Well yes and no. The phases of the moon were understood well before Galileo --- however Galileo discovered the moons of Jupiter and no doubt their associated phases --- as well as the phases of Venus.
The tidal effect (guess where it got that name) caused by the gravity of the Sun and Moon.
Venus has no moons.
Spring tides are caused by new and full moons. Neap tides are caused by 1st and 3rd quarter moons.
Mercury does not have any moons.
Yes! Both the moons, that is the Phobos and Deimos have phases like the moon of our's.
phases
yes
The pressure and temperature mostly the temperature.
you use the moons movement and phases to tell time because of the seasons, rotation, and revolution
The moons reflection from the Sun's light. The light hits the Earth so the viewer can see the moon.
Moons Milk - In Four Phases - Bonus Disc was created on 2001-12-21.
mangekyou sharingan