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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "25._Are_there_rocks_on_the_Moon_from_other_planets" retrieved in 0.035 sec with these stats:

  • "25" found 32857 times in 13147 documents
  • "are" found 19853 times in 5598 documents
  • "there" found 19716 times in 3479 documents
  • "rock" found 1740 times in 735 documents
  • "on" found 78455 times in 14289 documents
  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "moon" found 11511 times in 3952 documents
  • "from" found 51787 times in 14609 documents
  • "other" found 16120 times in 7546 documents
  • "planet" found 6671 times in 2647 documents



... end up in the path of another large object like the Moon. We've found rocks from the Moon and Mars on Earth, usually in Antarctica or the Sahara desert, so there are almost certainly rocks from Mars and the Earth on our Moon. The question is where they're hidden. Rocks from Venus and Mercury are also ...
... believe that there are caves on the Moon, but we really haven't seen any direct evidence of them. The long sinuous rilles are formed from collapsed lava tubes, which served as pipelines carrying fresh lava to the front lines of lava flows. As the Moon cooled and the lava shrank back down into the lunar ...
... , Moon's surface on average has an albedo, or reflectance of light, similar to that of charcoal. All light that we see from the Moon is either sunlight bouncing off the Moon and into our eyes (the bright ... off the Earth, then the Moon and back into our eyes (the dim part of a crescent Moon). Earthlight, the light during the lunar night reflected from the Earth, is significantly brighter than the light of a full Moon at night on ...
... much wasted light from a moonbase. While here on Earth we can be profligate in shining light up into space at night, light energy on the Moon will be a precious resource. There might be an occasional glint of light from any solar power towers at the lunar poles, but most of the activity will be underground ...
... on the Moon or on Mars, we will always have to wear some version of our spacesuit. It may look different than it now looks but it will still have to provide the same protection from the ... survive. Of course, in space we are in weightlessness—our body weight is zero pounds, and the spacesuit also weighs zero pounds. So the weight of the suit is not a factor. It ...
We think that there may be water ice in the ever-dark craters at the poles of the Moon, but we do not know for sure. Finding out is one of our top priorities. ---- ... Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This ...
There are no buildings on the Moon today. There will be resorts and towns on the Moon within the next 50 years. ---- Answer provided by John Spencer Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by ...
... live and work on the Moon. In the near future it will be for short periods, but we'll be constantly building and expanding, and eventually we will have people who live on the Moon from birth to death. ---- Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space ...
... the industrial, commercial, and financial center of the country with a population of about 2 million, about double the population of Washington D.C. Of course, the physical circumstances on the Moon are markedly different from those faced in the ...
There are no life forms that have been found in any of the samples from the Moon studied so far, and there are unlikely to be any, that we understand as life, given the almost complete lack of water on the Moon. Interestingly, when Apollo astronauts returned a camera from one of the ...

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