no that is most unlikely but maybe someday when be are all on another planet far away
Not necessarily. There is a distance, called the Roche limit, at which tidal forces on a moon will exceed the tensile strength of the material the moon is made of, at which point the moon will break into smaller pieces. The Roche limit has nothing to do with the size of the original orbit, other than the fact that the original orbit cannot be inside the Roche limit (or the moon would never have formed in the first place).
No. That was an early hypothesis proposed by Alfred Wegener, but such a thing is not actually possible. Pangaea was broken apart by a process called rifting, which is driven by processes within Earth.
how do mountains break apart
erosion can break rocks apart, weathering can also break rocks apart
There are not many ways to break apart a compound. The best way to break apart a compound is to chemically separate it.
Yes, althought it is highly unlikely. The most likely scenario would involve a collision between the moon and a comet or asteroid of sufficient mass to dislodge the moon from its existing orbit. The resulting impact would yield such high energies that the moon would almost certainly shatter into a cloud of small fragments. . The amount of energy that is required to artificially remove the Moon from its orbit is beyond our current capability.
Platypuses and echidnas are each distinct species. They do not "break apart".
It takes about 44 hours for a cumulas cloud to break apart.
A break-apart drawing is other wise known as a math mountain in certain grades
A break-apart drawing is other wise known as a math mountain in certain grades
A break-apart drawing is other wise known as a math mountain in certain grades
No Apart from NASA astronauts no humans have been on the moon.