The ratio of the earth's volume to that of the moon is right close to 50. In other words, the moon is 1/50th of the volume of the earth. Please refer to the link below.
None.
The volume of the moon is about 16 times larger than the combined volume of all Earth's oceans.
Probably the same reason some humans are said to go crazy on a full moon. The moon has influences on the Earth such as ocean tides. Living things could be picking up the gravitational and magnetic influence the moon has on the Earth - thus sometimes acting strange.
The moon's average density is about the same as the density of mantle of the Earth.
As long as you're on Earth, you will always see the same side of the moon. This is because the moon is tidally locked with the earth, meaning is rotational period is the same as its revolutionary period. This allows us to always see the same side of the moon, no matter where on earth we are.
The moon's orbital period is the same as its rotational period, so the same side of the moon always faces the earth.
Gravity and the pull of the moon are the same thing. The pull of the moon is caused by the moons' gravity.
Almost
The Moon is considerably smaller than the Earth. Its volume is about 2% of the Earth's. Its mass is only about 1.2% of the Earth's. Its surface gravity is about 1/6 that of the Earth.
The Sun's volume is approximately the same as 64,314,000 volumes of Earth's Moon.
The Earth is much more than 8 times "bigger" than the Moon, but there are several ways in which this could be interpreted; in terms of diameter, surface area, volume, or mass. The Earth is about 5 time larger in diameter than the Moon; the Earth has a diameter of about 13,000 km, while the Moon has a diameter of about 2400 km. In surface area, the difference is more pronounced; the Moon has about the same surface area as the continent of Africa, about 1/15th that of the Earth. By volume, the Moon is only about 1/40th of the Earth's volume, and if measured by mass, the Earth is about 80 times more massive. (The Earth has a much greater density than the Moon does.)
The Earth has 81 times the mass of the Moon, but is only 49.3 times larger by volume. This demonstrates the relatively less dense nature of the Moon compared to Earth, because it does not have the same large, dense iron core.
no the earth is bigger than the moon
Earth's tectonic plates ride on a sea of molten rock or magma, and it's possible that the moon's gravity exercises a pull on the magma in the same way as it affects ocean tides. This would be strongest at times when it (the moon) swings close to the earth, or when the sun and moon are in line with the earth in a sun-moon-earth alignment. Wonder if anyone has collected statistics on this.
The same as between the Moon and the Earth. The distance from the clouds to the surface of the Earth is insignificant, compared to the Moon-Earth distance.The same as between the Moon and the Earth. The distance from the clouds to the surface of the Earth is insignificant, compared to the Moon-Earth distance.The same as between the Moon and the Earth. The distance from the clouds to the surface of the Earth is insignificant, compared to the Moon-Earth distance.The same as between the Moon and the Earth. The distance from the clouds to the surface of the Earth is insignificant, compared to the Moon-Earth distance.
If the Moon was 10 percent of the Earth's diameter and at the same distance with the same density it would have a different orbital speed, would look smaller and affect the ocean tides less.If it were 10% of Earth's diameter and have the same mass as the present Moon, it would just look smaller and not be able to cause eclipses of the Sun.
The reason is because the mass is like the volume and the weight is like how heavy an object is.
The reason is because the mass is like the volume and the weight is like how heavy an object is.
The moon doesn't have an ocean because for a liquid to exist it needs air pressure, the moons atmosphere is almost non existent, so there is not enough pressure to sustain any fluid.