neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin
The last man to walk on the moon was astronaut Eugene Cernan of Apollo 17 in December 1972.
No, essentially mass = gravity the earths mass is roughly 81 * that of the moon, if you stood at the same distance from both, the force on you from the earth would be 81 * that of the moon.
Yep
If the Earth and moon stood still, the moon's gravitational pull would still exert a significant influence on the oceans, creating a constant tidal effect. This would result in a bulge of water on the side of the Earth facing the moon, leading to higher tides, while the opposite side would experience a lower tide. However, without the Earth's rotation to create the typical tidal cycle, these effects would be more static, resulting in prolonged high and low tides on the same sides of the Earth. Overall, the gravitational interaction would still be present, but its dynamics would differ greatly from our current experience.
Human have landed on the Moon, not a planet. It was NASA's Apollo missions which successfully landed humans on the Moon from 1969 to 1972. No human has landed on any other planet besides Earth's Moon.
No, the Moon is as far as astronauts have ever gone.
12 astronauts from 6 successful moon landing missions have walked on the moon's surface.
1969
The last man to walk on the moon was astronaut Eugene Cernan of Apollo 17 in December 1972.
If you stood at one spot on the moon, you would see the sun up for 14.8 days, anddown for the next 14.8 days. (However, even with the sun up in your sky, you wouldstill see the stars.)Another interesting thing to think about:If you stood anywhere on about 1/2 of the moon's surface, the earth would always beup in your sky. If you stood anywhere on the other 1/2 of the moon's surface, the earthwould never be up in your sky.
12 men walked on the moon. There's no way to tell you about each mission. The best source for information would be "A Man on the Moon" by Andy Chakin.
it will be same you will be able to see moon , you cant see moon from earth in day because the shine/light of sun is more than moon. hope i helped u !
he was up there for 8 days 14 hours and 36 minutes
No. No one from Earth has ever stood on Pluto. Nor, for the matter, on any of the other seven planets in the Solar System. The only non-artificial object we have visited is the Moon.
No. Nobody has traveled farth than the far side of our own Moon.
the answer is Neil Armstrong was just a original American man until he stood on the moon in 1969.
Visually. If you stood in one spot for 28 days the moon would be in a different point in the sky until the 28th day.