When I use Files.Move or Directory.Move is it going to do the same thing
Technically, it's not going to do anything to the file. It's going to make a system call to the underlying OS to perform the move operation.
So in that sense, yes, it will do the same thing. When you instruct Windows Explorer to "move" a file it, much as you summarize, effectively just re-indexes something somewhere. (That part is handled by the file system, which the OS uses.) When you perform these functions in .NET code, at some level deeper in the framework they're essentially invoking the same OS-level operations that Windows Explorer does.
or is it going to do a Copy and then a Delete
I don't think I've ever seen a file system which performs a move operation in this way. (Short of one written by some novice or student as an academic project perhaps.) If one does exist, it's highly unlikely that it would be in common use by any operating system you're likely to encounter.
Basically the software (whether it's Windows Explorer or code in the .NET Framework) tells the OS to perform the operation. The OS tells the file system to perform the operation. The file system itself should be very optimized to do this.