Just like any other dark grey object, the moon absorbs most of
the sunlight incident on it, and reflects the rest.
No, the moon does not emit its own light. Instead, it reflects light from the sun, which is why the moon appears to light up the night sky. This phenomenon is what allows us to see the moon from Earth.
No. The moon reflects the sun's light and the earth is heated and lite by the sun.
Light from the sun is reflected by the moon, creating 'moonlight'
Neither the sun nor the moon are planets. The sun is brighter than the moon by far. The sun emits its own light. The moon only reflects light from the sun.
The light from the moon comes from the sun's rays reflecting off its surface. The moon does not produce its own light, it simply reflects the sunlight that reaches it from the sun.
The moon absorbs the light of sun and reflect them. We may not see the full moon because the angle we are standing at is wrong. if we stand at he correct angle we will see the moon clearly
The Moon receives sunlight from the Sun and reflects it instead of producing light on its own. On Earth, moonlight is the reflection of sunlight.
the sun only emit light. not the moon. it will reflect the light of the sun.
chlorophyll
The moon reflects light just as any other object reflects light that falls upon it. Only about 7% of the light from the Sun is reflected off the moon's surface == ==The moon reflects the light from the sun.
The "light" from the moon is reflected sunlight. The phases of the moon are a clue as to the location of the sun.
The moon gets its light from the sun.
No because the Moon reflects the light of the Sun.
The moon and earth get there light from the sun when the sun shines onto the moon the moon reflects the suns light onto the earth.
Yes, the moon gets its light from the sun.
Ozone is the chemical that absorbs UV light. It is present in the stratosphere.
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