Geography, asked by wadhwamanveer65, 1 month ago

A meteor is about to hit the surface of the moon. How will the meteor appear, as seen from the moon, before hitting the moon's surface

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Many meteoroids are formed from the collision of asteroids, which orbit the sun between the paths of Mars and Jupiter in a region called the asteroid belt. As asteroids smash into each other, they produce crumbly debris—meteoroids.

Answered by SAGARTHELEGEND
5

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While it's true that the moon's negligible atmosphere does increase its vulnerability to impacts, I suspect (having not done the research) that a better explanation for its more heavily cratered surface is its lack of plate tectonics. When we look at the moon, we are seeing billions of years of accumulated impacts. Surface features on the Earth simply don't last that long because the crust is constantly being deformed and recycled.

#SAGARTHELEGEND

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