Skip to content

Why do we always see the same moon face?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: Tidal locking synchronizes rotation

Moon doesn't rotate at allWrong. The moon does rotate—once per orbit (~27.3 days). We see the same face because its rotation period equals its orbital period (tidal locking).

Tidal locking synchronizes rotationCorrect! Tidal locking (synchronous rotation) means the moon's rotation period equals its orbital period around Earth. Earth's gravity created tidal bulges on the moon long ago. These bulges experienced torque, gradually slowing the moon's rotation until it matched the orbit. Now the same face always points Earthward. Many moons are tidally locked to their planets!

Moon is perfectly sphericalWrong. Shape doesn't determine this. Tidal locking occurs when gravitational interactions synchronize rotation and orbital periods over time.

🚀 Play today's quiz — new questions daily

More Astronomy & Space questions