The moon is caught in Earth's gravitational pull and the Earth spins on its axis and it is as though the moon is revolving around it
A "moon" or a "satellite" of that planet
It takes 24 hours and 50 minutes to go from moonrise to moonrise; this is because the Moon is revolving around the Earth at the same time that the Earth is rotating on its axis.
The moon isn't revolving around the earth in a complete circle. For a solar eclipse to happen the moon must be directly between the sun an earth. Then you could only see the eclipse from one part of earth. For a lunar eclipse you can't see the moon at all or barely.
Yes. A moon (or natural satellite) do revolve around other planets besides Earth. The only two planets without moons revolving around them are Mercury and Venus.
Earth's Moon has no planets, unless you consider Earth to be the Moon's planet. A planet is defined as an object revolving around the Sun that is large enough to form itself into a sphere from the force of gravity, and yet not be so large as to create fusion like the Sun. It also must clear its orbit of other dust and debris. A moon, on the other hand, is an object that revolves around a planet.
Because that is what it does, it orbits the earth.
Because that is what it does, it orbits the earth.
The moon revolving around the Earth - creates the tides.
Simply, the moon is the moon.
The earth is flat!
the moon is in the outer space and revolving around the earth in an orbit.
No, because the moon is revolving around the earth.
No. The moon Is constantly revolving around the Earth, which is revolving the Sun.
Gravity.
the law of gravity supports that the moon revolves around the earth
The moon is Earth's satillite, revolving around earth eternally.
The moon is revolving around Earth, so sometimes the Moon is between the Sun and Earth and Earth is between the moon and sun.