Yes, of course.
During New Moon and Full Moon, the moon's gravity pulls on the oceans more than during the other phases. Therefore at night time the tides are highest under the full moon.
A lunar eclipse occurs when the full moon passes through the Earth's shadow.
Earth's moon is located approximately 384,400 kilometers (238,855 miles) away from Earth in space. It orbits around Earth in a slightly elliptical path, which takes about 27.3 days to complete a full orbit.
It may only be full for 1 second, but it looks full for about 3 days.
Full, large or whole. Maybe the question was meant to be...How would the Earth appear to an observer on the moon during a full moon?
I'm not sure but I think it has something to do with gravity
During New Moon and Full Moon, the moon's gravity pulls on the oceans more than during the other phases. Therefore at night time the tides are highest under the full moon.
There is no data to indicate that the temperature on the earth as a whole or at any given place on it is in any way correlated with the phases of the moon.
full moon
gravity
Yes, the moons gravity pulls slightly on the earths hydrosphere. After a full moon you may notice that the oceans waves are distorted moving in several directions.
Not sure about "full on earth" but meteoroids which fall to earth are called meteorites.
one rotation is one day.
Sometimes half sometimes full.. It depends on where the sun is.
The moon and earths gravitational pull (gravity)
There's plenty of gravity on the moon. On the moon's surface, it's a full 161/2% of what it is on the Earth's surface.
because of the full gravity on earth