There is no "lunar time zone" -- when astronauts visited the Moon, and the instruments in Lunar satellite systems, they used what today we call "Coordinated Universal Time", which used to be called Greenwich Mean Time.
A sundial or any using of the Sun to identify the time on the Moon needs to know your lunar longitude, and keep in mind that the Sun rises, passes mid-day, and sets just one cycle every 28 days, more-or-less.
A sundial or any using of the Sun to identify the time on the Moon needs to know your lunar longitude, and keep in mind that the Sun rises, passes mid-day, and sets just one cycle every 28 days, more-or-less.
-
There are 360 degrees of longitude on the moon, all of which have their own unique answer to this question.
-
I imagine if any pictures or research is being down on the Moon, they use UTC time,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTC
-
would that be daylight time zone or darkside time zone
-
Same as Earth: 13.7 billion years
-
Where on the Moon?