If the Sun and the Sun's gravity suddenly disappeared, each of the planets would go flying off into space at their orbital velocities. In the case of Earth, that's about 67,000 miles per hour. Depending on where each planet was in its orbit, there might be the possibility for a collision or a near-miss with another planet.
We humans wouldn't really notice; we'd be too busy freezing to death to care.
the life on earth will cease to death
The Earth is tilted. It affects seasons. The earth takes one year to move round the sun. In summer you are on the bit that's tilted towards the sun. In winter you're on the bit that's tilted away from the sun.
No, but it looks like its moving 'cause the earth is spinning.
That would be a lunar eclipse.
The sun rotates because it goes around the earth.
the life on earth will cease to death
well it depends if you live in the west the sun would move to the east and if you live in the east the sun would move to the west
Because the Sun is more massive than the Earth. If the Earth was more massive than the Sun, then it would.
The sun does not move around the earth.
well it depends if you live in the west the sun would move to the east and if you live in the east the sun would move to the west
Without the suns pull of gravity, the Earth and any other planet would move in a straight line. It is the sun that forces the planets to move in an orbit.
The Earth and everything else in our solar system would move with it. In fact, the sun does move, since it is orbiting around the Milky Way galaxy.
The sun doesn't move across the Earth's surface; rather, the Earth rotates on its axis, causing the appearance of the sun's movement across the sky. The sun appears to move at an average speed of 15 degrees per hour due to the Earth's rotation.
If gravity were not a force between Earth and the sun, Earth would move in a straight line tangential to its orbit instead of orbiting around the sun. This would cause Earth to drift off into space, no longer held in orbit by the sun's gravitational pull.
the sun
If this would be a Pokemon question, it would be solarbeam. Otherwise, what on earth are you talking about?
No, the sun does not move westwards around the Earth. From our perspective on Earth, it appears as though the sun moves across the sky from east to west due to the Earth's rotation on its axis. In reality, the sun appears to move because of our planet's rotation, not because it is moving around the Earth.