Not for thousands of years ! It's 'drifting' away at the rate of 1.5 inches a year. By the time it's too far away to affect the earth, the sun will have already swallowed the eath up as it grows into a red giant !
The earth's ozone layer does not include the moon. The moon is far beyond.
No. The tides are caused from the gravity of the moon. Venus and Mars are too far away to make any difference to the tides
Yes, the moon helps to keep our orbit stable. We'd be in trouble, over the long term, anyway, without the moon. the moon also helps the tide move in and out, so without the moon, no surfing
No. The stars are much too far away for the Earth's existence to have any measurable effect on them.
I'm not too sure where you are looking from, but from Earth, the Moon looks a lot smaller than the Earth.
The earth's ozone layer does not include the moon. The moon is far beyond.
No. The tides are caused from the gravity of the moon. Venus and Mars are too far away to make any difference to the tides
No,its way to far away.
From the Moon all you can see is planet Earth, the Moon is too far away to see any detail such as a monument on Earth with the naked eye.
Very little, the moon is too far away, on a good day you can just about make out the continents.
No. The rising and falling tides are caused by the gravitation pulls of the sun and the moon. Mars is too far away to have any noticeable effect on earth tides.
You see the moon. Rings are too far away from Earth to see.
None, zilch, nada. It's too far away.
None have ever been outside low earth orbit. The moon is too far
A major effect of the Moon's revolution around the Earth is the tides. The gravity of the Moon (and of the Sun, too) pull on the Earth's oceans.The oceans bulge outward on the side facing the Moon and the opposite side of the Earth - shorelines underneath the bulge experience high tide. This bulge is called the tidal bulge. The Earth rotates underneath the bulge, pushing the bulge ahead of the Moon -- the tidal bulge then has a gravitational pull of its own on the Moon. This effect boosts the Moon in orbit. Meanwhile, the friction of the tidal bulge on the Earth's rotation causes the Earth to very slightly slow down.Therefore, because of the effects of the Moon's revolution around the Earth, the Earth's day is getting slightly longer, and the Moon is getting slightly farther away from Earth.
My earth? We don't share it? And effects? Not affects? Effect means a result of something, like the effect of light through a prism Affect means to influence, as in the gravity of the moon affecting the tides on Earth. Beyond this lesson in grammar and usage, your question is far too broad; do you mean gravitationally, ecologically, volcanically, tectonically, radiologically, or WHAT?
The stars are too far away of Earth's gravity to have any noticeable effect on them.