Centrifugal
The driving force behind the weather on Earth is the uneven heating of the atmosphere, which creates pressure differences that lead to the movement of air masses and the formation of weather systems such as high and low-pressure systems, winds, and storms.
The type of heat transfer that creates a force big enough to move continents on Earth is called mantle convection. This process involves the movement of hot rock in the Earth's mantle, which drives the motion of tectonic plates and causes continents to drift over long periods of time.
The SUN. !!!! Not only does it give daylight and rotate about it under gravity, but its radiation drives the weather , by heating or cooling. Thereby giving us rain/precipitation or dryness, calm of blowing winds. The connection is very tenuous and indirect, but with out the Sun , these weather phenomina would not occur. NB THe SUN drives everything in the Solar system.
...The driving force of weather is the sun.
Mass and acceleration creates force (Mass*Acceleration=Force).
The gravitational force exerted by the moon is the primary force that creates tides on Earth. The sun also contributes to tidal forces, but to a lesser extent than the moon. The interaction of these gravitational forces with Earth's rotation results in the daily patterns of tides.
Solar radiation accounted for most of the drive force on Earth's weather.
The action force is the gravitational pull of Earth on the object. The reaction force is the object's gravitational pull on Earth. According to Newton's third law, these forces are equal in magnitude and opposite in direction.
True. Air particles are pulled towards Earth's surface by the force of gravity, which creates atmospheric pressure.
Water stays put on the Earth's surface as the force of gravity pulls it towards the center of the planet. The rotation of the Earth creates a centrifugal force that counteracts the gravity, resulting in a balance where water doesn't spill as the Earth rotates.
Every heavenly body due their mass have gravitational force. Since the moon is significantly less massive than Earth gravity on the moon is weaker than it is on Earth.
The rotational force of the Earth-moon system causes tidal bulges in the ocean. This force creates a gravitational pull that leads to the rise and fall of ocean levels in a predictable pattern known as tides.