I mean, if someone moves to the other side of the planet, you won’t both be able to see the moon at the same time, but at the end of the day, there is only one moon. We all see the same moon.
Opposite sides can see the moon simultaneously. It will be for a shorter period, but for all two points on the earth there should be at least a single time per moon orbit that the moon is visible by both at the same instant.
Well, it appears to be a crude drawing of the US state Oregon. The uppermost city is probably Portland, and there’s a bunch of small towns located south and slightly east that are 4 hours from Portland
What’s sad, is that depending on time zones/where you move the picture doesn’t hold true
I mean, if someone moves to the other side of the planet, you won’t both be able to see the moon at the same time, but at the end of the day, there is only one moon. We all see the same moon.
The moon is reversed if the other person is seeing it on the other side of the planet, so technically not the same moon face.
It’s still the same face
I meant the orientation.
That’s… that’s not how it works…
I meant the orientation we see.
Really? I thought nobody saw the dark side
They don’t, this person is wrong.
I did not mean the dark side.
the dark side is the side that doesnt get hit by the sun. That’s the only difference there.
Opposite sides can see the moon simultaneously. It will be for a shorter period, but for all two points on the earth there should be at least a single time per moon orbit that the moon is visible by both at the same instant.
Well, it appears to be a crude drawing of the US state Oregon. The uppermost city is probably Portland, and there’s a bunch of small towns located south and slightly east that are 4 hours from Portland
haha I am thinking Medford or Klammath Falls
Good ol’ Methford