The earth obviously does. The moon does not.
Io, the moon of Jupiter.
Similar:1. Both in Solar System2. Both have gravity3.Both have craters,[moon has more, Earth has less]4. techtonic activity5. both have rocksDifferent:1. Earth is has more mass than the the moon2. Earth has liquid water the moon doesn't3. Footprints on the Earth would be there a few days, but on the moon it could be there millions of years.4. no atmosphere on moon5. moon no oxygen6. earth has metal and moon doesn't They are both satellites. The Moon is a satellite to the Earth. The Earth is a satellite to the Moon.Definition - Satellite - A celestial object that revolves around a primary. Well, for one, both are more or less spherical masses trapped in the sun's gravitational field. For two, the moon is trapped in the earth's gravitational field. For three, man has set foot on both. For four, the terrain of both are well known. For five, eclipses happen between them when either one is between the sun and the other.
It is mainly gravitational forces from the Sun and Moon that cause tides, but the rotation of the earth has a tiny effect on it.
Not any more. There used to be (about 1 billion years ago) but not now.
It is because there is less gravitational force on the moon.
The earth obviously does. The moon does not.
At the moment Earth and the moon Io have active volcano's
Seismic events on the moon are naturally called moonquakes, not earthquakes. They occur, but are less common and less powerful than those on Earth. The moon has no volcanoes since the magma that was under its surface long ago solidified.
There are no active volcanoes on the our moon.
Io the Moon of jupter has over 400 active volcanoes.
No, Earth isn't the only body in the Solar System with active volcanoes. Io, the third largest moon of Jupiter has active volcanoes with evidence. Venus, Mars and Pluto are also thought to have volcanoes based on their behaviour.
Venus is known to have active volcanoes, evidenced by lava flows and volcanic structures on its surface. Mars has extinct volcanoes, but there is no current activity. Triton, a moon of Neptune, also shows evidence of past volcanic activity. Earth's moon had active volcanoes in the past, but they are now dormant.
Volcanoes.
Io
Jupiter's moon Io has over 400 active volcanoes.
Io, Jupiter's moon has active volcanoes of lava from magma caused due to tidal forces from Jupiter and large moons like Ganymede and Callisto. Triton, a moon of Neptune, and Enceladus, a moon of Saturn both are active with Cryrovolcanoes. These are volcanoes that give off water vapor, methane, ethane, ammonia, etc.
It is covered in volcanoes. Currently, it is the only known moon in our solar system to have active volcanoes.