I feel your pain, I have the greatest empathy for your predicament, and
I fully understand why you're having trouble observing the three dim ones.
The reason is that the Earth only has one single natural satellite. There
are no others.
The moon will probably never leave the influence of the Earth's gravity completely. This is because although the moon is slowly moving away from the Earth, it only moves about 4 centimeters a year. Considering that theoretically the Earth's gravity reaches out indefinately, it would be impossible for the moon to escape the Earth's gravity completely, so the moon will never leave the Earth's gravity.
The diameter of Saturn is 120,536 km across its equator (and 108,728 from pole to pole).Saturn is equivalent to 95 EarthsSaturn's Diameter is 9 times larger than the Earth's. Saturn's mass is 95 times more then Earth's mass. I hope this did helpSaturn's mass = 95.152 x Earths, while its volume = 763.59 x Earths.60 268 ± 4 km9.4492 Earths
Approximately 4 Earths would equal the diameter of Uranus
The 4 perceptual constancies are size, colour, brightness and shape! :)
I think the unanimus answer is that when the earth collided with another planet(putting it on a tilt) a chunk broke off and got caught in the earths magnetic pull. There are no other theories i know of.
The Moon is a ball of dusty rock; it is approximately as reflective as charcoal. However, the SIZE of the Moon, and its closeness to the Earth, and the brightness of the Sun mean that even the 4% of the sunlight that is reflected from the Moon mean that it appears to be plenty bright.
The Moon is 1/4 of Earth's diameter, 1/50 of Earth's volume, and 1/80 of Earth's mass.
No they are not. The moon is round so a half moon would be half of the moon showing while a quarter moon would 1 out of 4 parts of the moon.
This is a trick question. Objects weigh less on the moon than they do on the Earth, however, objects have exactly the same amount of mass on the moon as they do on the Earth. So the 4 kg stone still has 4 kg of mass on the moon. But it only weighs about 2/3 of a kg on the moon.
No, because every three of four days, the moon's phases changes and sometimes you cannot see the moon every four weeks the same time.
Since we share the same moon, we should have the same phases. 1. New moon 2. waxing crescent 3. 1st quarter moon 4. waxing gibbous 5. full moon 6. waning gibbous 7. 3rd quarter moon 8. waning crescent.
No on the moon you weigh approximately 4 times less on the moon than you do on Earth. Of all the planets, you weigh the heaviest on Jupiter.
The moon will probably never leave the influence of the Earth's gravity completely. This is because although the moon is slowly moving away from the Earth, it only moves about 4 centimeters a year. Considering that theoretically the Earth's gravity reaches out indefinately, it would be impossible for the moon to escape the Earth's gravity completely, so the moon will never leave the Earth's gravity.
The diameter of Saturn is 120,536 km across its equator (and 108,728 from pole to pole).Saturn is equivalent to 95 EarthsSaturn's Diameter is 9 times larger than the Earth's. Saturn's mass is 95 times more then Earth's mass. I hope this did helpSaturn's mass = 95.152 x Earths, while its volume = 763.59 x Earths.60 268 ± 4 km9.4492 Earths
1)Settings 2)Brightness 3)Your done 4)Helpful tips Auto Brightness is a energy saver 4 your i Pod but it makes your I Pod darker And the scale drains your battery
Ray Bans come in 5 categories. 0 is for use in "dimmed brightness" (cloudy conditions). 1 is for partly sunny. 2 is for medium brightness. 3 is for high brightness. 4 is for exceptional brightness. However, category 4 glasses are not recommended when driving. There are three letter codes. N-normal. P=Polarizing. F=photochromatic. Hence 3n means normal, for high brightness.
for lowest brightness- 9-14 hrs for low brightness- 8-12 hrs for medium brightness- 6-9 hrs high brightness- 4-6 hrs highest brightness- 3-4 hrs