Due to the libration of the moon we see approximately 60%, so there is about 40% we do not see from the earth.
As seen from the earth, never.
The moon is seen from the Earth...
Generally, yes, just as we see the moon when it is "up". Earth can be just over the horizon of the moon, or straight up, depending where you are on the moon. The same side of the moon always faces the earth, so from the far side, Earth can never be seen.
Because the earth doesnt go around the moon, the moon go's around the earth, and because the moon is round, u can never see all of it
The moon's phases can be seen from the earth, but not by an observer on the moon. Similarly, the earth's phases can be seen from the moon, but not by an observer on the earth.
Only our moon ("The Moon") can be seen from Earth.
When the moon is becoming more illuminated as seen from Earth, it is transitioning from a new moon phase toward a full moon phase. This period is called the waxing phase, during which the sunlit portion of the moon increases. The moon's position relative to the Earth and the Sun allows more of its illuminated side to be visible, culminating in the full moon when the entire visible face is illuminated.
It is not because of sunlight that the Moon can be seen from Earth. It has everything to do with the location of the Earth and Moon, and the properties of reflected light.
Not exactly. The lighted side of the moon as seen from Earth is that part that is not shadowed by the Earth.
The new moon is the phase of the moon when it is not visible from Earth, as it is positioned between the Earth and the Sun. An example sentence could be: "During the new moon, the sky appears dark because the side of the moon facing Earth is not illuminated by the Sun."
It means that the earth's gravitational pull is too weak to hold the guy, and he flies up to the moon never to be seen again.
No airport on earth can be seen from the surface of the moon by the unaided eye.