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Your question makes no sense.
no they are mirror images
No, the moon never appears in the night sky at exactly the same place. The moons orbit and earth's rotation are two entirely different things, which is why lunar phases aren't always the exact same, though they still occur in the same order.
While the earth rotates, the moon revolves around it. While the moon rotates it has different phases. Improvement : I think this question is about the fact that the Moon's crust seems to be thicker on the "far side". This may be why there's much less sign of volcanic activity on the far side.
the same as earths just a different moon
Mutual negatives or additive inverses.
No, each one of the moon's phases appears on a different night.
Yes,of course!
exist in different phases
Your question makes no sense.
They have different numbers of neutrons.
No, we see the same side of the moon as it orbits and goes through phases because the moon rotates at the same rate it orbits.
Water and ice are the same chemical substance in different physical phases, liquid and solid respectively.
Different synaesthetes have different responses to the same numbers so there is no single colour for 75.Different synaesthetes have different responses to the same numbers so there is no single colour for 75.Different synaesthetes have different responses to the same numbers so there is no single colour for 75.Different synaesthetes have different responses to the same numbers so there is no single colour for 75.
Isotopes have same number of electrons. They have same number of protons, so their atomic numbers are same. They have different numbers of neutrons resulting different mass numbers.
they are the same because they both have whole numbers
No, the only way the GCF and LCM of two numbers can be the same is if the numbers are the same.