Want this question answered?
The dark circle (new moon)
It depends on what phase the moon is in. You can see anything from nothing, a sliver, to a full circle.
The answer is yes. We always see the same side of the moon from the Earth because the time it takes the moon to circle the Sun is the same as the time it takes to circle itself.
the moon is slowly going away but it'll take millions of years before it does. the moon isn't really doing a perfect circle around the earth, it is slowly spiraling away. Don't worry thought you'll never get to see that day
so we can see at night. some people are afraid of the dark. THe moon is a circle
The dark circle (new moon)
It depends on what phase the moon is in. You can see anything from nothing, a sliver, to a full circle.
Are you posable talking about a Full Moon?
The answer is yes. We always see the same side of the moon from the Earth because the time it takes the moon to circle the Sun is the same as the time it takes to circle itself.
the moon is slowly going away but it'll take millions of years before it does. the moon isn't really doing a perfect circle around the earth, it is slowly spiraling away. Don't worry thought you'll never get to see that day
so we can see at night. some people are afraid of the dark. THe moon is a circle
a circle, and you can sometimes see craters
IT IS Called A NEW MOON
it is just the light from the moon shining on the clouds. you don't see it if it is a cloudless night.It is called the halo and caused by ice particles or water droplets in the atmosphere.
Earth's moon ... the one you see in the sky from your backyard ... does not circle Mars.The distance from earth to our moon is less than 1/2 percent of the closest possible distance from earth to Mars.
Both the moon and the earth rotate, roughly at the same speed , so man on earth will only see the one side of the moon. It is called "geosynchronous orbit". It isn't a perfect lock, though. Because of a movement of the moon called "libration", we can actually see about 59% of the moons surface over every four week period. But never more than that - from earth.
After a full moon as we see less and less it's called a waning moon