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why does the moon look like it lights up but it doesn t is it because it sun set
coz the sun lights up different parts of the moon........ i think
There is insufficient information provided for a meaningful answer. What is the mass of each moon? How far are each of them away from the planet? What speed are they travelling? What are their orbits, particularly in relation to each other?
The closest Pluto gets to the Sun is 4.4 billion kilometers, which means that light from the Sun always takes longer than 4 hours to reach Pluto. For a rocket vehicle travelling at the speed that astronauts went to our Moon (less than 40,000 km/hr), it would take over 12 years to reach Pluto!
The waning gibbous moon will reach it's highest point in the sky somewhere between midnight and sunrise.
Yes , laser lights easily reach the moon. It should take about 1.3 seconds to reach it. The moon is about 239,000 miles away. Light travels at a constant 186,000 per second. So the math is easy.
sorry if you wer planing a bus ride to the moon but its imposible but fore the recorde it would tacke 500,000000000 light years
You cant walk to the moon you will have to reach there by the space craft, and the time will depend on the speed of the craft.
Spacecraft can reach the Moon in a few days.Actually the time depends on the speed. You can assume an average speed, and use the formula: distance = speed x time Solving for time: time = distance / speed
Approximately three weeks at 500 miles per hour.
The sun is the big flashlight that lights up everything it can reach. The earth is the thing that gets in the way of the flashlight, & can darken the moon if the moon passes through its shadow.
No. The brightness of the moon is caused by the sun shining on it, just like the brightness of a beach, a snowdrift, a mountainside, or a lake, none of which travels around the earth.
It would depend on how fast you were travelling. For a set speed, one mile on the moon would take the same time as one mile on Earth.
It takes approximately 3 days for a spaceship to reach the moon, depending on the trajectory and speed of the spacecraft.
Yes, but it has to be travelling at the MOON'S orbital velocity, which is quite a bit more than that needed for low earth or even geosynchronous orbit. The faster one goes, the higher the orbit.
He likes travelling around the world.Travelling is not a cheap hobby.
That would depend on the speed they are travelling. If they were both going at the same speed then the one nearer would complete its orbit first, as it has a shorter distance to travel.