The rocks on the moon reflect light the same way that rocks on Earth do. The moon only looks bright because it is set against the darkness of space.
the moon reflects light from the sun
Light from the Sun travels in a straight line through space and when it reaches the Moon, it can be reflected, absorbed, or scattered. The Moon's surface is covered in fine dust and rocks which can reflect and scatter the light, allowing us to see the Moon as bright in the night sky.
The moon is essentially a big, dead world of rocks. It makes no light by itself.The moon is brightly lit by the light from our Sun. This reflected light from the moon is so bright because the moon has a high 'albedo', or ability to reflect lightCertain moons around other planets have such a low albedo that they are next to invisible.
its surface
The sun.
on earth
The moon reflects light from one star in particular: the sun.
the sun only emit light. not the moon. it will reflect the light of the sun.
It doesn't reflect, it goes straight there.
Yes.
The moon and planets reflect sunlight, they do not produce light.
No, many moons in our solar system reflect light from the Sun. Moons like Europa, Ganymede, and Titan also reflect sunlight, just like Earth's moon.