You do not need any equipment. The surface is visible with the naked eye.
To see more detail you could buy binoculars or a telescope.
You would not be able to see the moons from the surface; Jupiter's atmosphere is too thick.
Jupiter dosent have a surface. And if it did, you wouldn't be able to see the moons because of the 30 mile thick clouds!
Yes, in a sense. But, the solar "eclipses" on Mars would better be referred to as transits. The moons of Mars are much too small to block more than a small portion of the sun as seen from Mars. An observer on the surface of Mars would not even notice the difference without special equipment.
you would see all the planets around it and see the moons ground
Wal-Mart has a garden center that carries garden equipment. You can purchase lawn mowers, tillers, chain saws, gardening tools, greenhouses, garden beds, seeds, bulbs, fertilizer and anything else you would need for your garden.
that it would be like the craters on the moon and that it is very hard.
if you weigh 100lbs on earth your weight would be 16.6lbs on the moon. it still has a gravitational pull so yes.
The effect of gravity would be less, a 1 kg mass at the moons surface would be under a force of 1.623 newtons, 1 km above the surface, it would be 1.621 newtons
Surveyor 1, it was a soft lander built for NASA that would collect surface data for the Apollo Program. It landed on June 2, 1966.
4 moons would go across the earth, and 109 earths would go across the sun.
The moons craters would have been made by pieces of rock - meteroids. These collided with the moon in the past to make the craters. Material ejected from the collision would then have fallen back to the surface of the moon to make further smaller craters further away.
A gas giant would have the most moons, seeing as Jupiter has 63 moons, and Saturn has 61 moons, both of which are gas giants.