Various things such as living organisms, elements, our universe's current era of stars and the occasional unknown and known phenomenon.
Yes, we always do.
We do not always see the same side of the moon, because while its orbiting the Earth, it is also rotating on its axis, as does Earth. The rotation of the Earth on its axis is what causes night and day.
The moon orbits the Earth, so it is always visible from some point on Earth.
To see the Earth, look down. To see the Moon, you have to be outside and look at the sky. Note that the Moon is not always above the horizon.
As long as you're on Earth, you will always see the same side of the moon. This is because the moon is tidally locked with the earth, meaning is rotational period is the same as its revolutionary period. This allows us to always see the same side of the moon, no matter where on earth we are.
Because the moon turns as it goes around the Earth.
Because the moon turns as it goes around the Earth.
No, if the Moon rotated on its axis as fast as Earth, we would not always see the same side. The Moon is currently in synchronous rotation with Earth, meaning it takes the same time to rotate on its axis as it does to orbit Earth, resulting in the same side always facing us. If its rotation speed matched Earth's, we would see different sides of the Moon over time, similar to how we see different parts of Earth as it rotates.
You always see the same side - as the moon takes the same time to orbit the earth as it does to rotate once on its axis !
The one that you can see. Due to libation we can see slightly more than 50% of the moon from earth.
No, we can see only 59% of the moon.
The moon does not rotate so on Earth we always see the same side no matter where the observer is.