The Moon's crust may be thicker on the far side. So there was less volcanic activity. So there is less lava to cover up craters. Lava flows form the "maria"
which are much more in evidence on the side facing Earth.
The Earth's moon appears as a round, rocky body that reflects sunlight to varying degrees, giving it different phases throughout the month. Its surface is pockmarked with craters, mountains, and plains, and it has a grayish color due to the presence of rocky materials like basalt and anorthosite.
Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars all have impact craters. Earth's craters are subject to weathering, subduction and orogeny, erasing them from the surface after a time. Mercury is an airless world, geologically inactive, so it has preserved its craters from the beginning of the solar system. Mercury's appearance is most like that of our moon.
Moon craters are mostly formed by impacts from meteoroids, asteroids, or comets striking the moon's surface. Rilles, on the other hand, are thought to be formed by lava tubes or collapsed lava channels from ancient volcanic activity. Both features give us information about the moon's geological history.
Yes, there are craters on the moon that, when viewed from Earth with specific lighting angles, can give the appearance of a face. The most famous of these is the Man in the Moon, visible from certain angles due to the shadows of lunar terrain.
The maria on the moon have fewer craters compared to the highlands because they are made of younger, solidified lava flows that have covered and filled in older cratered regions. The volcanic activity that created the maria also played a role in erasing or masking the older impact craters.
Most of the craters on Earth's moon are believed to have been caused by impacts from meteoroids, asteroids, and comets over millions of years. These impactors have struck the moon's surface and created the circular depressions we see as craters.
Earth has an ozone layer in atmosphere. It is present in the stratospheric region. Other planets which have oxygen in their environment might have ozone.Some planets like earth do. Others might have.
The Earth's moon appears as a round, rocky body that reflects sunlight to varying degrees, giving it different phases throughout the month. Its surface is pockmarked with craters, mountains, and plains, and it has a grayish color due to the presence of rocky materials like basalt and anorthosite.
By asteroids impacting the surface.
what exactly do you mean by good crater?? Neptune would not have any craters on the outer surface because it is a gas planet, the core maybe might have craters but i could not say for sure
When facing a problem might be a good time!When facing a problem might be a good time!When facing a problem might be a good time!When facing a problem might be a good time!
Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars all have impact craters. Earth's craters are subject to weathering, subduction and orogeny, erasing them from the surface after a time. Mercury is an airless world, geologically inactive, so it has preserved its craters from the beginning of the solar system. Mercury's appearance is most like that of our moon.
Moon craters are mostly formed by impacts from meteoroids, asteroids, or comets striking the moon's surface. Rilles, on the other hand, are thought to be formed by lava tubes or collapsed lava channels from ancient volcanic activity. Both features give us information about the moon's geological history.
Yes, there are craters on the moon that, when viewed from Earth with specific lighting angles, can give the appearance of a face. The most famous of these is the Man in the Moon, visible from certain angles due to the shadows of lunar terrain.
I'm not an astronomy buff but I'm going to say the moon has more craters than earth because earth has the atmosphere to burn meteors from hitting earth while the moon has nothing. Whilst the atmosphere does burn up very small meteors most craters are eradicated on the earth by weathering. This is due to the atmosphere, precipitation, tectonic activity. The moon has little or none of these.
a moon has water ice craters rocks and might at one point of time... life.
Actually, it is. There are HUNDREDS of circular features that are believed to be the weathered-away remnants of impact craters. Here on Earth, small craters (the most common kind) don't last too long. Rain, wind and earthquakes tend to erase all but the largest craters, while the largest ones become overgrown with trees and cut through by rivers, or jumbled up in the collision of the continental plates as they scurry across the planet. And remember that 75% of the Earth's surface is water; a large-ish meteor strike at sea might cause a major tsunami, but leave no visible impact.