Loss of force or momentum of a body which is moving in a circle..
can be explained by a trajectory of a pot hanging with water in it, and if it is dripping in the bottom, swing it in circle, the orbit changes with the loss of water, and also with the decrease in force.
Yes it is the past tense of the verb think.
if it orbits the earth is it moving? yes if course its moving if something orbits something of course it would be moving
The term orbital energy would make much more sense than energy orbits.
An object that orbits Neptune would be called a MOON of Neptune, if it is large enough.
If there was no Earth, the Moon would never have been created.Or it would just be an asteroid-type thingy that orbits the sun. or orbits empty space while orbiting the sun.
No. What would be the point?
i do not this answer that's why i am asking you this answer.
The simplest and best answer to that question is: -- Without gravity, there would be no astronomical orbits. -- Once you completely understand gravity, you can figure out everything there is to know about orbits, because it all comes from the behavior of gravity.
The simplest and best answer to that question is: -- Without gravity, there would be no orbits. -- Once you completely understand gravity, you can figure out everything there is to know about orbits, because it all comes from the behavior of gravity.
Rectangularization of human survival curves happens to the rising survival of all ages. It is also associated with the inconstancy of the distribution of ages at death.
Earth and Venus DO follow elliptical orbits around the sun (though the orbit of Venus is only very slightly elliptical). Earth's orbit being elliptical is, combined with our axial tilt, why we have seasons.
That would be stars. Our sun, for example, orbits the center of the Milky Way Galaxy once ever 200 million years.