Neither, the Earth stays at the same distance from the Sun, more or less.
The Earth's orbit is an ellipse, so the distance from the Sun varies a bit.
Still, the inertia of the Earth basically exactly balances the Sun's gravitational attraction and the Earth just goes round and round the Sun at more or less the same distance all the time.
If its orbit is at the same distance as Earth's orbit, it will take a year, just like Earth. Closer to the Sun it will take less time; farther from the Sun it will take more time - just like any planet. The time for a specific distance can be calculated using Kepler's Third Law.
Near the surface of the Earth, the time for an orbit is about one and a half hours. As objects (satellites) get farther, they would take longer for an orbit.Near the surface of the Earth, the time for an orbit is about one and a half hours. As objects (satellites) get farther, they would take longer for an orbit.Near the surface of the Earth, the time for an orbit is about one and a half hours. As objects (satellites) get farther, they would take longer for an orbit.Near the surface of the Earth, the time for an orbit is about one and a half hours. As objects (satellites) get farther, they would take longer for an orbit.
it is an ellipse and earth is closer to the sun when the northern half has winter
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Since the gravitational effect of the Sun decreases with distance from it, the planets farther from the Sun do not have to move as rapidly to remain in orbit. (In fact, the speed is what establishes the orbit, not the other way around.) So the outer planets, in addition to having much farther to travel in their orbits, are also moving more slowly. This combination means that outer planets take very much longer to orbit the Sun than do the inner planets such as Earth. By comparison, the length of time it takes (in Earth years) for each of the outer planets to make one complete revolution around the Sun: Jupiter - 11.9 Earth years Saturn - 29.5 Earth years Uranus - 84 Earth years Neptune - 165 Earth years
Any object that has a mass greater than 100 gram, will also have more inertia. By the way whether it is on Earth or not is irrelevant. If you take a 100-gram mass anywhere else, it will still have 100 gram; and the inertia (which depends on the mass) will also be the same.
The moon has been orbiting in elliptical cycles which take it close to earth and farther from earth for millions of years. And we don't even know the difference. Its possible that there may be higher tides than usual, but nothing disastrous.The moon has been orbiting in elliptical cycles which take it close to earth and farther from earth for millions of years. And we don't even know the difference. Its possible that there may be higher tides than usual, but nothing disastrous.The moon has been orbiting in elliptical cycles which take it close to earth and farther from earth for millions of years. And we don't even know the difference. Its possible that there may be higher tides than usual, but nothing disastrous.The moon has been orbiting in elliptical cycles which take it close to earth and farther from earth for millions of years. And we don't even know the difference. Its possible that there may be higher tides than usual, but nothing disastrous.The moon has been orbiting in elliptical cycles which take it close to earth and farther from earth for millions of years. And we don't even know the difference. Its possible that there may be higher tides than usual, but nothing disastrous.The moon has been orbiting in elliptical cycles which take it close to earth and farther from earth for millions of years. And we don't even know the difference. Its possible that there may be higher tides than usual, but nothing disastrous.The moon has been orbiting in elliptical cycles which take it close to earth and farther from earth for millions of years. And we don't even know the difference. Its possible that there may be higher tides than usual, but nothing disastrous.The moon has been orbiting in elliptical cycles which take it close to earth and farther from earth for millions of years. And we don't even know the difference. Its possible that there may be higher tides than usual, but nothing disastrous.The moon has been orbiting in elliptical cycles which take it close to earth and farther from earth for millions of years. And we don't even know the difference. Its possible that there may be higher tides than usual, but nothing disastrous.
The Moon will drift farther and farther from Earth, while Earth slows down, until Earth always shows the Moon the same face (just as the Moon already shows Earth the same face all the time). It doesn't seem that the Moon will completely escape from Earth's gravity.
The reason object move around space is inertia. Take the moon and Earth for example, gravity makes the moon stay close to the Earth, and inertia makes the moon circle (or revolve, or orbit) around the Earth in a circular motion. the path it takes is called its orbit.
For the same reason that it would take longer to run around your block than to run around your yard. The further planets have a further distance to travel to make one revolution around the sun.
no it's closer to one month
If the moon were closer to Earth, tides would be much stronger, which could lead to more extreme weather events. The increased gravitational pull may also affect the Earth's rotation, potentially causing changes in the length of days. Additionally, the moon's closer proximity could disrupt communication and navigation systems that rely on satellites orbiting the Earth.