That's called "full moon".
no. Earth and Mars are the only terrestrials with moons.
The 27 known moons of Uranus are visible from earth only with extreme magnification.
All of them. Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars.
Mercury has no moons Venus has no moons Earth has 1 moon (Of course) Mars has 2 moons And that's all the inner planets HOPE IT HELPED :)
None of the terrestrial planets have "many" moons. Mercury and Venus have none, Earth has one, and Mars has two.
Only Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars have solid surfaces, as well as various moons. The other planets are all gas giants. Pluto would be solid, but is no longer regarded as a planet. The different planets and moons that have solid surfaces also have hills, valleys, mountains, craters and plains like Earth.
The flat surfaces of all polyhedra are called faces and a rectangular prism is simply one kind of polyhedron.
Yes and its flat surface faces are in regular shapes.
no. Earth and Mars are the only terrestrials with moons.
All you do is count the surfaces of it. It's not like your trying to find an actual face. :) If you count the surfaces you are sure to succeed.
Yes, I have the same moon as you do and everybody else on Earth.
neptunes moons are all yellow except for one witch is blue this is wat i think tho
Everything has gravity, the bigger it is the more it has. Moons DO have gravity, but it might be less than Earth's.
No, the planets have different number of moons, from zero to about 60-70.
The 27 known moons of Uranus are visible from earth only with extreme magnification.
Mars, Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus all have moons. Venus and Mercury do not have moons.
all have high tide if the moons by them