We would be in very serious trouble. Apart from missing something beautiful, we would have seriously reduced tides, by almost two-thirds. The tide cycles are important for the sustaining of various kinds of life along earth's shores, and tides create important currents that help sustain much of the sea life we have living today. Even worse, the moon has helped to regulate and stabilize earth's rotation on its axis. In the long term, earth's tilt would go haywire, due to tugs and pulls by the sun and the other planets. The seasons as we know them would shift and change with disastrous results. At some point, earth's axis may even become close to coplanar with the ecliptic-- the poles would point directly toward the sun a couple of times per year. If the moon disappeared, there's no doubt that the consequences would be dire.
I blew it up FOOLLL
the moon would blow up and hit the earthand we would all die
the space shuttle challenger blew up on January 28, 1986
Sound cannot travel through the vacuum of space, so if the moon were to blow up, there would be no medium for the sound waves to propagate. As a result, people on Earth would not be able to hear the explosion.
After the first man landed on the moon in 1969, several more Apollo missions followed, with a total of 12 astronauts walking on the moon. However, interest and funding for further manned missions to the moon diminished, and efforts shifted towards building a space station and exploring other parts of space.
Well, if you blew up blood, organs, and skin would be everywhere... and you would die.
There would be cat every where
Because there is no medium to transmit the sound.
well no body really knows......
It didn't blow up, so you don'y have to worry about it!
I blew it up FOOLLL
Earth would blow up along with the moon.
burn up
burn up
to make a long story short it blew up
I'm not sure, though I hypothesize that the explosion would be contained in the gravity of the black hole.
If the Moon were to speed up in orbit, it would be further from Earth. Remember, this is governed by angular momentum, not ballistics.