Yes and no. Our atmosphere is part of the earth, and when you see the blue sky you are actually seeing the light scattered by the atmosphere. Of course if you think of the sky as going all the way to the distant stars, then you are no longer talking about the earth's atmosphere.
No, the Moon is not in Earth's atmosphere. The Earth's atmosphere extends about 480 kilometers above the surface, while the Moon is about 384,400 kilometers away from Earth. The Moon is in space, orbiting around the Earth.
The Moon has no protective atmosphere, as Earth does. On Earth, the atmosphere absorbs part of the heat, and moves it around.
When it is the night it can be -160degrees C and 100 degrees C when it is day
It Rotates, and is called penumbra
If the moon's atmosphere were similar to Earth's atmosphere, the stars near the moon would appear white to the naked eye. This is because in Earth's atmosphere, stars appear white due to the scattering of light by the gases present in the atmosphere.
There is no atmosphere on the Earth's moon.
There is no atmosphere on the moon. There is insufficient gravity to keep an atmosphere there.
All moons are denser that earths atmosphere
No. It is part of the hydrosphere.
because the gravitational attraction of moon is very low(about 1/6th of earths') which is not sufficient to hold the air molecules to form atmosphere.
oxygen
nitrogen
ozone
Upper Part
Yes. Hydrogen is part - albeit a very small part - of the Earth's atmosphere. Typically it makes up about 0.000055% of the atmosphere
No, the Moon is not in Earth's atmosphere. The Earth's atmosphere extends about 480 kilometers above the surface, while the Moon is about 384,400 kilometers away from Earth. The Moon is in space, orbiting around the Earth.
ozone