if you stare at it long enough.
The moon appears to move in the sky as you move because of its position relative to the Earth. As you change your viewpoint by moving, the angle at which you see the moon changes, causing it to appear to shift its position in the sky. In reality, the moon is staying in its orbit around the Earth.
yes
So we could beat Russia in a competition to see who could reach the moon first.
A moon phase clock
Moon buggies move around the moon using their huge wheels that have to be solid and able to move around uneven grounds. ( the moon!)
You would see the moon.
The moon appears to move in the sky as you move because of its position relative to the Earth. As you change your viewpoint by moving, the angle at which you see the moon changes, causing it to appear to shift its position in the sky. In reality, the moon is staying in its orbit around the Earth.
As the moon travels around the Earth, different parts of it are lighted by the sun. We see various parts of the face that are being lit by the sun. Since the sun and shadow move around the moon, we see different parts of the moon face, or phases of the moon.
no of course not
yes
If you could see it, it would be a waxing half moon with the upper (eastern) half of the moon lit.
In the same way we see brightness from the Moon as a result of the Sun shining on it, you would see brightness on the Earth from the Moon when the Sun is shining on it. You would not be able to see normal lights, like street lights, from the Moon.
The moon is one whole sphere, and the reason why you can only see half of it sometimes is due to the light being shone onto it. The light you see from the moon is actually the reflection of the sun's light. As the sun and move across the sky in different patterns, we see slight changes in the moon each night. These changes are called the moon's phases. There is a full moon, in which you can see the entire face of the moon, and there is a new moon, where you can't see it at all. For more information on the phases of the moon, see the related link.
So we could beat Russia in a competition to see who could reach the moon first.
Fly around it.
A moon phase clock
If you could watch the moon for a month, you would see it go through all of it's phases as well as watch it move EAST through the sky from one night to the next.