Galileo
The light we see from the moon is actually sunlight that is reflected off the lunar surface. The moon does not produce its own light.
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.
no
No, the moon's light is actually sunlight that is reflected off its surface. The moon doesn't produce its own light; it merely reflects the light from the sun.
The moon does not generate any perceptible light. It does, however, reflect a good amount of the light that falls on it from the sun. As a consequence we see the moon go through phases as it orbits the earth and sunlight falls on different parts of the moon.
The light we see from the moon is actually sunlight that is reflected off the lunar surface. The moon does not produce its own light.
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.
no
The moon's light is really reflected from the sunlight that hits the moon.
Yeah,,star is a source of light,,, ... as opposed to a planet or moon for example, which shines as a result of reflected light.
When hear energy is converted to loght energy it is called hot source of light (sun light). when light source is produced from (generally reflected light, moon light) a cooler object.
No, the moon's light is actually sunlight that is reflected off its surface. The moon doesn't produce its own light; it merely reflects the light from the sun.
The moon's light is reflected of the sun
The Moon's light is reflected sunlight.
Sun
The moon does not generate any perceptible light. It does, however, reflect a good amount of the light that falls on it from the sun. As a consequence we see the moon go through phases as it orbits the earth and sunlight falls on different parts of the moon.
Yes, but it is not a "direct source" of its light. The Moon, like the Earth, is illuminated by the light of the Sun. The moonlight that we see is simply the part of the sunlight that is reflected by the lunar surface. This is easily seen by the phases of the Moon, when only part of the Moon's lighted surface is visible from Earth, and we cannot see the non-illuminated portion.During an eclipse of the Moon, the Earth is directly between the Sun and the Moon, so very little light makes it to the Moon.When there is a new moon phase, the Moon is between the Sun and the Earth, so we cannot see any of the illuminated part of the Moon.