it depends on the size of the meteor, usually the moon is bigger
A meteor that strikes the moon's surface is called a meteoroid when it is in space, a meteor when it is burning up in Earth's atmosphere, and a meteorite once it lands on the moon's or Earth's surface.
No, Apollo 11 did not get hit by a meteor during its mission to the Moon in 1969. The spacecraft successfully landed on the Moon and then returned safely to Earth without encountering any meteor impacts.
Moon illusion is when the moon seems bigger when it is rising. So really the moon is not bigger it is in the mind.
the moon
There is no erosion on the moon and mercury to erase the impact sites.
A star is much bigger. A meteor can be as small as a piece of dust. Stars are huge.
Yes.The moon actually does have craters left by meteor crashes.
no proof of what happened, but if it was a meteor, parts could have hit off onto the moon.
A moon stone can be found in Meteor Falls.
Meteor Falls
Nickel Meteor craters .
a meteor
A meteor that strikes the moon's surface is called a meteoroid when it is in space, a meteor when it is burning up in Earth's atmosphere, and a meteorite once it lands on the moon's or Earth's surface.
Sitem, is the name of another moon for Neptune and it is derived from this, the meaning is 'meteor-like', because the moon itself looks like a meteor. Hope I helped :)
The moon gets craters from meteor's that hit it's surface
No, Apollo 11 did not get hit by a meteor during its mission to the Moon in 1969. The spacecraft successfully landed on the Moon and then returned safely to Earth without encountering any meteor impacts.
Moon illusion is when the moon seems bigger when it is rising. So really the moon is not bigger it is in the mind.