Of course it does, being made of green cheese, as any fule kno. However, perhaps any fule do not kno that smell cannot travel in a vacuum, so in the end it, er, doesn't. Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!
According to Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt, the Moon dust tracked into the LEM smelled similar to spent gunpowder.
Where, then, does the concept of smell come from? Or the organs to detect it? Or the ability to differentiate smells? The earth is an inexhaustible treasure-trove of odours, scents, stinks, perfumes, whiffs, wafts, stenches, fragrances, effluvia, redolances, funks, bouquets, tangs, pongs, musks, niffs, aromas, and reeks. The moon, OTH, has no air to carry scents nor denizens to appreciate them.
I'm reasonably sure it does not honk, but I'm unfamiliar with "stonk". If the moon does that, it does so without my knowledge or approval. As previously noted, without air, it would be hard to tell. In space-suits, even more so.
Stuck in a lesson with Sigismund Arbuthnott, the mad maths master, who hav donned his long wollen hem hems becos of the cold. Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!
From one of my favourite TV programs QI - What does the Moon smell like Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image!
Jeeves, does the Moon stonk? Exchemist, what's, "mad" about him? Let's hear some of your mathematical knowledge?