A Biblical answer from Genesis 1 would be that in the beginning the Earth was covered with water. During creation week this water was separated into areas on the Earth and above the Earth. Like seas/lakes below and a "giant peel" of water above somewhere in the stratosphere.
Any Meteors impacting the earth at first would fall in water, later go through the "peel of water".
So only after the Flood Meteors that survived the Atmosphere would hit the Earth and leave a crater, hence less craters on Earth.
The most heavily cratered moon in the solar system is Callisto.
Earths surface of gravity is 4.6m/s2 more than moons.
the holes in the moons surface are where astroids hit the moons surface
The craters are formed because of rock and iron hitting the moons surface. When the rock and iron hit the earths surface damage is caused to trees, roads and that sort of thing.
The mass will remain the same, but the weight will be one sixth of what it was on earth, since weight depends on the local force of gravity. The moons gravity is one sixth of the earths.
The most heavily cratered moon in the solar system is Callisto.
Deimos is the smallest of Mars' moons. It is small, lumpy, and heavily cratered. It whirls around mars every 30 hours.
Earths surface of gravity is 4.6m/s2 more than moons.
Earth's core
None, only the earths core is more closer, the moons surface is 37.000 Vertices from earth
They have Icy, cratered surfaces.
The Moon is roughly spherical; weather permitting, we see the near half of the Moon.
About 0.183g, where one g is the earths gravity, so about one fifth of the earths gravity. It is similar to our own moons surface gravity.
because the moon does not have a equater like the earth to protact it self ;)
earth is 81.3 times the mass of the moon . acceleration due to gravity at earths surface = 9.82 (m/s)/s acceleration due to gravity at moons surface = 1.62 (m/s)/s . 1 kg at earths surface, force = 1 * 9.82 = 9.82 newtons 1 kg at moons surface, force = 1 * 1.62 = 1.62 newtons
A Biblical answer from Genesis 1 would be that in the beginning the Earth was covered with water. During creation week this water was separated into areas on the Earth and above the Earth. Like seas/lakes below and a "giant peel" of water above somewhere in the stratosphere. Any Meteors impacting the earth at first would fall in water, later go through the "peel of water". So only after the Flood Meteors that survived the Atmosphere would hit the Earth and leave a crater, hence less craters on Earth.
Yes as Pluto is the smallest and the last planet in the solar system, it is smaller then the earths moons.