No. It isn't possible with current technology to go through the Moon - or other solid materials for that matter.
Currently, only trained astronauts have been able to go to the moon. However, with advancements in technology and space travel, it is possible that in the future, private citizens may also have the opportunity to visit the moon.
every 29.53 days
Yes
Ever seen water go down a plughole in your bath? When a satellite or moon gets caught in a planets gravitational field it vortexes in the same way. Only it moves toward the planet very slowly. Hope I Helped
It takes the moon 29 and a half days to go through each cycle.
Yes.
No
Yes, everyone who installs satellite must go through training (if they work through a company). Some companies that offer this are satinstalltraining.com or mobilsat.com.
It Can Go Through The Moon What Do You Think?
No women have been to the moon. As of now, only male astronauts have traveled to the moon.
Rakesh Sharma was the first person to go to the moon
No. It would fall through the moon.
It takes 29.5 days for the moon to go through all of its faces. (I saw the answer in an awesome book)
It takes 29.5 days for the moonto go through all the phases - from full moon to full moon. :)
no because Americans usually go to the moon and ya
It takes approximately 29.5 days for the moon to go through a complete lunar cycle, which includes all its phases from new moon to full moon and back to new moon.
How high can a satellite go, and remain a satellite of the Earth? About 500,000 miles, and at any altitude above about 150,000 miles, a satellite probably won't remain in a stable orbit. The problem is that as the satellite gets further away from Earth, the Earth's gravitational attraction decreases; and at some point, the attraction of the Moon, or the Sun, is of significance. As the years go by, little tugs of the Sun and Moon will distort the orbit a little, and the minor distortions will eventually add up - and the satellite might fall to Earth, or crash into the Moon, or be pulled out of Earth orbit and start orbiting the Sun. There are dozens of spacecraft that have been launched out of Earth orbit; some are in Solar orbit, so they are satellites of the SUN, not the Earth. One is a satellite of Mercury, a couple of Venus, many around Mars, some of Jupiter and one of Saturn. And two spacecraft aren't even satellites of the Sun any longer; the two Voyager space probes launched in the 70's are on a path that will never return to the Sun, and will continue on into deep space.