Want this question answered?
True.
First understand that Just like the Earth, the Moon does spin on its axis. However the spin of the Moon is "tidally locked" with Earth so that as the Moon orbits the Earth about every 27 days, it also makes one very slow spin in the same direction every 27 days. This means that no matter when you see the Moon, it always shows the same side to the Earth.
The moon turns one complete spin every 27.32 days. It also happens to make onecomplete trip around the earth in exactly the same length of time, and the result isthat the same 'face' of the moon is always turned to face the earth.
Whatever moon phase you're looking at, it was the same 29.53 days ago, and it'll be the same again after another 29.53 days.
The moon is always the same size it may appear bigger because more of the sun's light is shining on it, but no the moon does not "grow" or "shrink".
True.
24hoursAs the moon always shows the same face to the Earth, would not a day on the moon be infinitely long?
The Moon will drift farther and farther from Earth, while Earth slows down, until Earth always shows the Moon the same face (just as the Moon already shows Earth the same face all the time). It doesn't seem that the Moon will completely escape from Earth's gravity.
They appear to be the same size, as the sun is a very long distance away. The sun is many times larger than the moon.
The sun and the moon are the same distance from the earth
Everyone on earth sees the same face of the moon.
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.
When the moon and sun appear in the same spot in the sky at the same time
Yes. It rotates at a rate which keeps the same side (or face) to Earth at all times. Or pretty much so. Because the Moon spins once per orbit, the same face of the Moon is always pointing to the center of the orbit. But because the Moon's orbit is elliptical rather than circular, we do get little peeks around the lunar horizon. It spins at a constant speed, but speeds up and slows down some in its orbit. In total, we can see about 54% of the Moon's surface from the Earth. And because the same face of the Moon is always turned toward Earth, an observer on the near side of the Moon would see the Earth appear to hang motionless (or almost) in the sky. And very little of the far side of the Moon ever gets a glimpse of Earth.
Yes. The moon spins at just the right speed so that the same face always faced the Earth.
because it rotates at the same rate as it fevolves
The moon does not rotate so on Earth we always see the same side no matter where the observer is.