If the moon had enough mass to maintain an earth like atmosphere it would likely be a very unpleasant place. Because the moon has a rotational period of a little over 14 days any single point on the moon is exposed to the sun or in dark for a little over 14 days at a time. This would likely lead to boiling hot "days", 14+ earth days long, and freezing cold "nights", also 14+ earth days long.
Also, just as a side note, the moon has gravity.
The moon doesn't have any atmosphere or weather. It is very dead, and the only thing that disturbs the surface of the moon is the occasional collision of a meteorite, producing its many craters.
The long term forecast for the moon is a very cold night followed by a very warm day for the next several thousand years, with zero percent probability of precipitation. All of the days are going to be sunny, except for the occasional terrestrial eclipse.
The Moon doesn't have an atmosphere to speak of.
The Moon doesn't have an atmosphere to speak of.
The Moon doesn't have an atmosphere to speak of.
The Moon doesn't have an atmosphere to speak of.
The Earth's atmosphere has no effect on the moon. Do you think the atmosphere reaches that far? The atmosphere only goes up about 200 miles, and the moon is a quarter of a million miles away from the Earth.
The temperature would depend on the density and composition of the atmosphere. The moon might have a hard time holding on to an atmosphere due to low gravity and tidal forces pulling from Earth. Also, solar wind would tend to strip an atmosphere away because of a lack of magnetic fields, Van Allen belts, and magnetosphere on the moon. So there is no way to say a temperature. This question is a little like asking "if pumpkins had wings, how high would they fly".
The Moon has been orbiting the Earth for something upwards of 4 billion years. It's not going anywhere.
If we humans are as smart as we pretend to be, we'll plant lunar colonies and inhabit the Moon; and Mars, and the larger asteroids, and perhaps some of the Jovian moons. Having all the human beings stuck here on one fragile little planet makes our species vulnerable to cosmic accidents and extinction.
In August of 1883, we may have just barely escaped extinction; new analysis indicates that the fragments of a billion-ton comet may have passed within a couple thousand miles of the Earth. That's comparable in size to the object that impacted the Earth 65 million years ago and killed off 75% of all life on the planet - including the dinosaurs.
Mass: 7.3477 x 1022 kg
Temperature: 130 K (-143 C) to 220 K (-53 C)
Atmosphere: none
if the moon had an atmosphere than it would also, of course, have weather. this would mean that all markings, footprints, and impact craters would eventually be wiped from the surface.
The Moon doesn't have an atmosphere to speak of.
There would be no life on earth.
The temperature of the moon during the night is -233 Celsius and 123 Celsius during the day. It is because the Moon doesnÕt have an atmosphere to block the Sun rayÕs that could help to trap heat at night.
This is because the moon has no atmosphere, and is therefore unable to maintain heat on its surface.
The Moon has no atmosphere with which to provide thermal inertia to its environment.
The moon does not have any measurable atmosphere.
The moon has no atmosphere (well, not enough to matter) and so it experiences extreme temperature changes since there's no atmosphere to smooth things out. Noontime temperatures on the moon can reach as high as 123 degrees Celsius; at night it can drop as low as -233 degrees Celsius (in the south polar basin, which is permanently in the shade).
The Moon has no atmosphere.
Temperature of the moon varies greatly since it had no atmosphere. At the equator on the side expose to the sun, the temperature can reach up to 120 oC At the very same equator on the dark side, the temperature is -200 oC, quite higher than average temperature of the surrounding space of -270 oC because the moon still have some heat from the core deep inside its' crust. If the earth had no atmosphere, the temperature would be the same as the moon.
The moon has no atmosphere
This has been answered here:What_is_the_temperature_on_the_moonThe short answer is that there is no atmosphere on the moon and therefor no air temperature.
lack of atmosphere
the are by the atmosphere
The Moon reflects all the light given off. The Sun appears to be red because of its temperature.
In fact, the moon does not have an atmosphere. The vacuum of space extends all the way to the surface of the moon. If the moon did have an atmosphere, missions like the Apollo program would not have needed such well insulated spacecraft, as the wild temperatures of the moon would have been better regulated by the atmosphere.
Well, the moon doesn't have an atmosphere at all, so the answer would be no.
The moon doesn't have an atmosphere, so nothing.
because of the temperature of the atmosphere, they are in different places, the temp of the atmosphere is different.
When it is the night it can be -160degrees C and 100 degrees C when it is day