Yes and it is covered with dust from the asteroids that crashed in to the moon
The moon is not a star. It is a large ball of rock that orbits Earth as a satellite. A star is a huge ball of burning gas. Our star is called The Sun.
The moon rock brought back by Apollo 11 was called "Sample 10057".
The Moon is primarily made of silicate rock, specifically a type of rock called anorthosite. It also contains minerals like olivine and pyroxene. Additionally, there are traces of metals like iron and titanium in the Moon's composition.
Simply put, the sun, our sun, is a great big ball of burning gas. The moon on the other hand is a large cold lump of rock that is orbiting the earth. The moon revolves around the earth and the earth revolves around the sun. A moon is a hunk of rock and dust orbiting a planet. Planets orbit their star, which is a giant ball of gas and thermonuclear fire. A Sun is a huge object that fuses Hydrogen to make vast amounts of energy. The Moon is a ball of rock, much smaller in comparison.
Yes, gabbro is a type of rock that can be found on the Moon. Gabbro is a common type of igneous rock formed from the cooling of magma. It is likely present in the lunar crust due to past volcanic activity on the Moon.
yes
The moon is a huge ball of rock, chemically similar to the rocks of the Earth's crust and mantle. It does not have a core of nickel and iron, unlike the Earth.
We learned from going to the Moon that it was formed after a huge collision by a Mars sized object hitting the early Earth and gouging out a huge amount of crust and mantle but no core material. This is because the rocks of the Moon are Earth like Breccia, a shattered volcanic rock.
The moon is made of rock.
The moon is not a star. It is a large ball of rock that orbits Earth as a satellite. A star is a huge ball of burning gas. Our star is called The Sun.
Yes, the moon is composed of rock.
no, the moon is a satellite made up of pieces of rock from the earth after a huge collision millenia ago. Stars are masses of burning gas that exist in galaxies light years away.
The moon rock brought back by Apollo 11 was called "Sample 10057".
Yes. Moon rock is similar to volcanic rock on Earth.
Earth, for example, is just a huge rock. The moon is closer to us so it orbits us, not the sun. Jupiter, another example, is just a super-massive rock. It has I believe 16 moons orbiting it. Pretty much every planet answers your question. -the guy who knows everying
Yes. The moon is a body of rock.
Moons usually are large chunks of rock that are ether from the planet itself (due to a massive impact, like ours) or just a huge piece of space rock that lingered into the planet's gravitational pull