That event hasn't been placed on the schedule, and as far as astronomers have been able to determine,
it doesn't appear to be coming about as the result of any natural causes either.
The moon's rotation is not as fast as the Earth's rotation.
The Earth has weather patterns that have eroded most of the craters on Earth. The moon has no weather, therefore no erosion.
On average the craters on Moon are larger than the Earth's because the Moon has no atmosphere to shield from impactors and no weathering processes.
the moon is the right size when it fromed ,and now is the right distance amd size
Impact craters on the moon have no water/weather to erode the craters away, but on Earth the erosion erases the craters over time.
The biggest impact on earth was believed to have been the time when our Moon was formed. A Mars-sized planet crashed into earth at an extremely high velocity, causing our earth to rotate on its axis. A lot of the material that was blown off by this impact eventually clumped together and became our Moon.
the impact was that we all had light at night and it con trolls the tides and if there was no moon there would be no waves so all the moon really does is con troll the sea and oceans and people say the moon use to be part of the earth but it hasn't been proven yet so the moon does make a big im pact on the earth when you really think about it.
There is no erosion on the moon and mercury to erase the impact sites.
becuse of the gravity of the earth that is impact or exerts to the moon..
Those are impact craters from when it was hit by meteors. The moon has no weather, so they never got erased like most of the impact craters that were on Earth's surface.
The leading theory for the Moon's creation is the Giant Impact Hypothesis. This theory suggests that a Mars-sized object collided with Earth in the early stages of the solar system, resulting in debris that eventually formed the Moon. This hypothesis is supported by similarities between the Moon and Earth's composition and the presence of a large impact basin on the Moon's surface.
The giant impact hypothesis states that the moon was formed after a planet called Thei slammed into the Earth right after the Earth came into existence.