No. The Apollo astronauts took about 3 days to get there.
there are roughly 12.5 looner orbits to 1 orbit of the earth The moon takes 27.32 days to orbit the Earth.
roughly 29.53 days, because of the size of the moon's orbit.
It takes 28 days roughly.
If a "day" is the time from one sunrise to the next, then on the moon, that's roughly 29 earth days.
It would take them roughly three days to reach the moon.
It takes roughly 3 days for a spacecraft to travel from Earth to the Moon. The actual amount of time may vary depending on the specific trajectory and speed of the spacecraft.
The lunar phase located 14 days past new moon is a full moon. The full moon occurs when the Earth is roughly between the sun and the moon, causing the entire illuminated side of the moon to be visible from Earth. This phase is characterized by a complete circle of light on the moon's surface.
A full lunar day is equal to 29.53 earth days. 29.53 earth days is the moon's synodic cycle-- That is the length of time it takes the moon to return to the same position in the sky relative to the sun. This means that the daylight period on the moon would be roughly 14.8 earth days, and the night time would be about the same length of time. This is another way of seeing why full moons are 29.53 days apart-- If you were at the center of the visible face of the full moon, it would be lunar noontime for you, with 29.53 earth days to go before your next lunar noontime.
That would be it's orbit. The moon orbits the earth in roughly a circular path.
It's only 3 days. The moon is very close at roughly 240,000 miles away.
One day on the moon is equal to approximately 29.5 Earth days. This is because it takes the moon about 29.5 days to complete one full rotation on its axis, which is the same amount of time it takes to complete one orbit around the Earth.
Roughly 29 days.