Only Earth has exactly one moon.
It must occur at new moon when the moon passes exactly in fron of the sun as seen from a place on earth. Usually at new moon the moon is not exactly in line and it passes above or below the sun so there is no eclipse.
None in our solar system. The Earth's Moon is the largest moon with respect to its planet.
Not exactly. The lighted side of the moon as seen from Earth is that part that is not shadowed by the Earth.
It's exactly on the line between the sun and your eye, so that when you lookdirectly at the sun, the moon is exactly in the way, blocking your view so thatyou can't see the sun.
Only Earth has exactly one moon.
The moon and earth are always exactly in line; any two points define a line. When the earth moon and sun are all exactly in line, that is different. When this happens it is either a solar eclipse or it is a lunar eclipse.
The Moon appears as large as a penny held at arm's length when viewed from Earth.
Only Earth has exactly one moon.
Earth is orbited by a large natural satellite known as the Moon.
In a gravitational situation, the forces are exactly equal in both directions.-- The Earth attracts the moon with a force that is exactly the same as the forcewith which the moon attracts the Earth.-- You attract the Earth with exactly the same amount of force as the Earth attracts you.-- Your weight on Earth is exactly the same as the Earth's weight on you.
The only large moon in the solar system with a retrograde orbit is Triton, the largest moon of Neptune.
It must occur at new moon when the moon passes exactly in fron of the sun as seen from a place on earth. Usually at new moon the moon is not exactly in line and it passes above or below the sun so there is no eclipse.
Because the sun doesn't exactly shin direct-sunlight on the moon.
The large indentation on the surface of the moon areÊcalled craters. It is a circular depression in the surface of the moon and other solid body in the solar system.Ê
A planet is too large to sit on a moon.
Large depressions on the moon are called craters. These are formed by the impact of meteoroids, asteroids, or comets hitting the moon's surface.