the sun reflects of the moon giving us moonlight
1.28 seconds at the moon's average distance from earth ... same as for a radio signal.
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.
The light on the moon is actually sunlight that is reflected off the moon's surface. The moon does not produce its own light.
Light is invisible until the light hits a suface. So when the light leaves the light source (say a lightbulb)the light will travel in the air as a invisible ray and will show up as soon as an object crosses the path of the invisible ray of light.
the light from the moon is a reflection of the light from the sun
moon
The ingoing ray of light is the incident ray
Not necessarily. A ray crater is in impact crater that has tapering lines of light-volored material extening outward. Ray craters can found on Mercury and other objects such as the moon, but most of these craters are not ray craters.
The average time that it takes for light to travel from the moon's surface to the earth's surface or vice versa is about 1.255 seconds.
1.28 seconds at the moon's average distance from earth ... same as for a radio signal.
mountainous crater regions and the light colored ray systems of a few impact craters
Moon walkTu
That depends on the speed. For a ray of light, a little over a second. For a spacecraft, with current technology, a few days.
An incident ray is the ray of light that shines on a mirror. This is the ray that strikes the mirror's surface.
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.
ray as in a ray of light
Moon walk