It does not. Gravity affects tides or more correctly causes them.
Moon affects the tide. It causes low tide and high tide on Earth. I guess it does not have a direct impact on the land surface of the Earth.
The roads might flood
a water fall
The most basic effect is the changing of the tide level due to the pull of the gravity of the moon.
This is most likely due to gravity. As water travels over the sand from a wave or swift tide, water begins to drain down through the drier sand on the shore. Gravity pulls the water downward under the top layer of sand.
Because, when there is a high tide, there is a combination of the gravity of the sun and moon pulling on the Earths surface. When that happens, there is high tide. When there is low tide, the moon is on a 90 percent degree different part of the sun, so that area has the least gravity, which means there will be low tide.
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.
the moon and the earths gravity pulling each other
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.
The moon does...... That's what my science teacher told me.
The moons gravity 'pulls' the earths water creating a 'tide.'
Yes, the moons gravity effects when the tide comes in and goes out.
The "force" your talking about is the moons gravity as well as the suns gravity for example a "spring tide" is when the moon and sun are on opposite sides of the earth therefor stretching the oceans into an oval. A spring tide is the optimal tide meaning it is the strongest type of tide but only occurs roughly every month
spring
Yes, all objects in the universe have gravity. The gravity on the moon is about 1/6 of the gravity on Earth.
the gravity
Red Tide is a term that refer to Algae blooms of toxic phytoplankton, it has nothing to do with the ocean tide or the moon's gravity.