This part of the Moon is about 70 kilometers thick.
What is the crust?
This makes up a majority of the Moon's surface, approximately 83%.
What is the highlands?
The first man on the Moon.
What is Apollo 11?
This is when the Moon moves into the Earth's shadow.
What is a lunar eclipse?
This is the formula used to get the weight of an object.
What is Newton's second law or F=m*a?
This part of the Moon is thought as very iron rich.
What is the mantle?
This is the type of rock that is commonly found on the Moon.
What is basaltic rock?
The failed Moon landing mission for the USA.
What is Apollo 13?
This is about how often a location may see a total solar eclipse.
What is every 360 years?
This is the units of force.
What are Newtons?
The Moon is composed of a lot of this element.
What is iron?
These are the darker spots on the Moon, thought of as the "seas" of the Moon.
What are the maria?
The first soft landing mission.
What is Luna 9?
This is when the Moon comes in between the Earth and the Sun.
What is a solar eclipse?
This is the kinematics equation used in the Moon unit, usually to find acceleration.
What is vf=vi+at?
This part of the Moon is solid and liquid and is the inner most part.
What is the core?
These are the trench like valleys found on the Moon.
What are the rilles?
First view of the far side of the Moon.
What is Luna 3?
This is the darkest part of the shadow.
What is the umbra?
If the weight of an object is 75 Newtons with a mass of 5 Kg, this would be the acceleration.
What is 15 m/s2?
This is the gravitational acceleration constant on the Moon.
What is 1.6 m/s2?
Meteorite impacts have formed these on the Moon.
What are craters?
First lunar landing.
What is Luna 2?
This is a part of the shadow, but not the darkest part.
What is the penumbra?
The acceleration of an object starting at rest and falls for 7 seconds with a final velocity of 50 m/s.
What is 7.1428 m/s2?