No, beacuse they stay at the same place.
Buggies on the moon stay in place due to the reduced gravitational force compared to Earth. The moon's gravity is about 1/6th that of Earth, allowing the buggies to stay on the surface without floating away. Additionally, they have wheels that provide traction to move around on the moon's surface.
The moon has gravity, but it is much weaker than Earth's gravity. Rocks on the moon stay on the surface due to the moon's gravitational pull, which is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity. This weaker gravity allows rocks to stay in place on the moon despite being less massive than on Earth.
because of the rotation of the moon. it rotates around the earth, so part of the time we can not notice all of the moon
because the moon spins around the earth at a slower rate than a 24 period
No, beacuse they stay at the same place.
3
no they do not all stay in the same place because some birds live in water
No, sometimes it is towards the Sun (at new moon), sometimes it is in the opposite direction (at full moon).
yes
Yes because there are no forces on the moon to erode the foot step. That is that same reason we can leave the Apollo's on the moon.
No. The moon Is constantly revolving around the Earth, which is revolving the Sun.
Buggies on the moon stay in place due to the reduced gravitational force compared to Earth. The moon's gravity is about 1/6th that of Earth, allowing the buggies to stay on the surface without floating away. Additionally, they have wheels that provide traction to move around on the moon's surface.
they stay in the same place
The moon has gravity, but it is much weaker than Earth's gravity. Rocks on the moon stay on the surface due to the moon's gravitational pull, which is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity. This weaker gravity allows rocks to stay in place on the moon despite being less massive than on Earth.
Your question does not make any sense. The Earth and the Moon stay the same size and are always in Space.
Because they're in the gravitational pull of the sun known as orbit