gravity
No. There is no wind, gravity, or water on the moon. The footsteps of the men who landed there are still there.
As far as tides it is th pull of the moon's gravity, but waves can be caused by wind.
they move because the wind and gravity pushes the ocean causing it to move from ocean to ocean.The gravity from the moon also impacts the oceans movement.The wind moves the water around spreading the water on the earth.
Wind, rain, fire, gravity , glacier retraction, waves. Moving water, ice, wind and gravity are the agents of erosion.
Running water, waves, wind, glaciers, and gravity Erosion is formed by wind, water, ice, and gravity.
wind water ice gravity
Gravity . . .Every particle of mass in the universe is gravitationally attracted to every otherparticle of mass in the universe.Water . . .Ice at the bottom of some deep craters in the moon's polar regions, where thesun don't never shine.Atmosphere . . . No.Weather . . . No.
No, the moon does not create waves, it creates tides because of its gravitational pull.
Water seems to be related to gravity in thesame way that paper is related to wind.
The five agents of erosion are water, wind, ice, gravity, and human activities.
Because there is No GRAVITY! Well... yes and no... Yes: Solar wind erodes the lunar surface but the effect is almost unnoticeable. No: The moon has no atmosphere so there's no weather to cause 'typical' erosion. Because there isn't Gravity
Gravity can pull water in and out, causing tide like motions. The gravity of the moon and sun, for example pull on the earths oceans and cause high and low tides.