It is possible, but not for a long long long long long long long long time.
Yes, Billions of people do each day. The Earth is a planet :-)
Eclipses of their moons can be observed on any planet that has them. But, interestingly, the spectacular "total solar" eclipses are not possible on any other planet but Earth.
Nobody from Earth has ever been to any other planet.
We haven't landed on any planets yet, except earth of course. Man has been to the moon and sent robots to mars but no man has ever stood on any planet other than earth.
We believe that shortly after the solar system formed, our planet Earth probably collided with another planet that was much smaller, probably smaller than Mars. The proto-Earth and the other body merged, and the debris from the collision probably formed the Moon. Since then, we're not aware of any collisions.
No, Earth is a planet orbiting the Sun.
Answer: Not that we have determined definitively so far.
No. As of current known orbital data, the Earth will never be in a position to collide with another planet.
Nobody has ever been to any planet in the solar system except for Earth
Mars is the closest Planet to earth, Venus is about two million km farther (but in the scheme of space that isn't all that far). Venus is the closest planet to the Earth, believe it or not . The closest planet to Earth may be Mercury, Venus, or Mars depending on where the planets are in their orbits realtive to one another at any given time. At closest approach, though, Venus comes the closest to Earth of any planet.
Possibly, but the new planet will not have any life forms. (Most likely.)
earth is the only planet known to man which has life but there is a huge possibility of life or a different type of it existing on another planet.scientists are contantly working to find life on another planet