No, the mountains on the Moon are not as big as those on Earth. The tallest mountain on the Moon, Mons Huygens, is about 5,249 meters tall, whereas Mount Everest on Earth is over 8,848 meters tall. This difference is mainly due to the smaller size and lower gravity of the Moon compared to Earth.
Yes, there are lots of mountains on the moon, as proved by Italian professor of Mathematics, Galileo. The proved this by making the first 20x zoom telescope and noticing mounting-looking hills, later realizing they were in fact mountains, measuring about 2.5 miles high. To compare, Mount Everest is 3 miles high.
As the earth orbits the sun over the course of a full year, the side of earth in darkness (night) will face out toward a different direction. The winter constellations are those that are in line extending from the sun through earth out into the galaxy during winter, and the summer constellations are those on the opposite side of the sun. Therefore, during different seasons you are actually seeing different parts of the universe due to earth orbiting the sun.
One thing that makes answering this a bit tricky is determining how to measure. The Moon has no "sea level", so the comparison that makes the most sense is to measure from the highest point to the lowest. On the Moon, this is a bit over 18km. On Earth, Mt. Everest is at nearly 9km above sea level, and the deepest point is the Mariana Trench at not quite 11km below sea level, for a total difference of well over 19km. By that standard, the Earth's mountains are taller than the Moon's mountains. However, the difference is only about 10%, and the Earth is a lot more than 10% bigger than the Moon, so proportionally speaking the Moon's mountains are taller.
yes there are.Infact, scientists have used telescopes to explore venus and there are some mountains there made out of rock that are bigger then 30000 Feet!So that meens bigger then MT.Everest!There are no mountains made out of something else.All the mountains on venus are made out of rock.
No, the environment on Venus is not conducive to the sort of life that exists on Earth.
They are the real life mountains that exist in the oceans.
No, the mountains on the Moon are not as big as those on Earth. The tallest mountain on the Moon, Mons Huygens, is about 5,249 meters tall, whereas Mount Everest on Earth is over 8,848 meters tall. This difference is mainly due to the smaller size and lower gravity of the Moon compared to Earth.
Those would be the ALBORZ MOUNTAINS.
No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.
The Earth is NOT SPHERE OR EVEN ROUND! Because of those mountains, hills and more which are part of the Earth. Earth's spheres are called: Lithosphere - Land Biosphere - Life (Includes all life on Earth) Hydrosphere - Water Atmosphere - Air
Every planet has a different terrain and a different set of tectonic plates.
No, the mountains on the moon are primarily formed by impact craters or volcanic activity, rather than plate tectonics. The moon does not have tectonic plates like Earth, so the geological processes that shape its surface differ from those on Earth.
because of the sun
They are the same because they both have water on some parts of the land and they both are a part of land on this earth. I hope this gave you a couple answers you are welcome. ~Alanna Lynn Harwick 4/18/13
Lofty mountains mean those mountains which are really high or above the rest of the mountains.
The cast of Days in Those Mountains - 2000 includes: Lu Jiang