The Moon's albedo is lower, meaning it absorbs
more energy per unit area than Earth. All other things equal, the Moon should be warmer.
Radius makes no difference. If radius accounted for the difference, then we would expect real strange answers for small rocks 1mm in radius.
Solar energy absorbed = infrarad energy reradiated
<br />
4\pi R^2 \sigma T^4 = \pi R^2 \left( {1 - A} \right)F<br />
where R is the radius of the Earth, sigma is the Boltzmann constant, (5.67e-1 W/m^2 K^04), T is temperature in Kelvins, F is flux at distance from the Sun, and r is Earth's distance to the Sun.
Pi and R
2 appear on both sides of the = sign and thus can be cancelled. So radius has nothing to do with it. Flux is derived by:
<br />
L/4\pi r^2 <br />
where L is the luminosity of the Sun (3.827e26 W).
Combining these 2 equations to solve for T gives:
<br />
T = \sqrt[4]{{\frac{{\left( {1 - A} \right)L}}{{16\sigma \pi r^2 }}}}<br />
Or in degrees Celcius:
<br />
T_{^\circ C} = \sqrt[4]{{\frac{{\left( {1 - A} \right)L}}{{16\sigma \pi r^2 }}}} - 273.16^^\circ K<br />
So for the Earth:
<br />
T_{^\circ C} = \sqrt[4]{{\frac{{\left( {1 - 0.36} \right)\,3.827 \times 10^{26} {\rm{W}}}}{{16 \times 5.67 \times 10^{ - 8} {\rm{W/m}}^2 \cdot {\rm{K}}^{ - 4} \pi \left( {{\rm{149597870691m}}} \right)^2 }}}} - 273.16^^\circ {\rm{K = }} - 24.2263113319468<br />
And for the Moon:
<br />
T_{^\circ C} = \sqrt[4]{{\frac{{\left( {1 - 0.07} \right)\,3.827 \times 10^{26} {\rm{W}}}}{{16 \times 5.67 \times 10^{ - 8} {\rm{W/m}}^2 \cdot {\rm{K}}^{ - 4} \pi \left( {{\rm{149597870691m}}} \right)^2 }}}} - 273.16^^\circ {\rm{K = }} 0.152451815813947<br />
Hmmm... I get a warmer moon.
Don't worry that your Earth temp and mine are off by a few degrees. Tinkering with the solar luminosity and albedo can account for this difference.
According to
Astrobiology by Jonathan I. Lunine, this formula
approximates what would be measured in the mid-latitudes were the Earth without atmosphere and spinning rapidly enough that the day/night temperature differences would be erased.
So perhaps the Moon's slower rotation accounts for the difference.