The moon rotates on its axis once each month, so daylight / darkness is about 14 or 15 days each.
When the earth rotates we go around the Sun and the moon. That means that the reflection of the Sun light and the Moons light makes it light and dark with out this system we wouldn't have what we caal night and day.
Yes, that's correct. Earth experiences day and night as it rotates on its axis, with the side facing the sun experiencing daylight and the side turned away experiencing darkness. This rotation creates a cycle of about 24 hours known as a day.
Neptune has 13 known moons and an orbital period of about 60190 Earth days.
They are precisely equal.
16 moons
At the equator (around the middle, as we look at it) the Moon measures 6,395 miles - 10,921 kilometres.
It would take 353
It's the celestial equator.
No, the moon always has the same side facing toward the earth, and the changing angle of sunlight on the moons face creates the waxing and waning effect we see on the moons surface. The far side of the moon, the side we cannot see from the earth is sometimes eroneously refered to as th dark side of the moon. It is only "dark" in the sense that we cannot see it from here.
Same as it's orbital period, about 27.32 days.
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how is the crater density used in the relative dating