never
In that case, the Moon would move in a straight line instead of moving around the Earth; it would quickly get away.
The moon will not stop revolving (orbiting the earth) any time soon. The moon is very slowly moving farther away from the earth, though, and this will mean a reduced tidal effect and a longer orbital period. This will take millions of years; the change in distance between earth and moon is extremely slow.
If the Earth's gravity were to stop pulling on the moon, the moon would continue to move. It would, however, fling off away from the Earth rather than continuing in its orbit.
It won't; a moving object has the object to continue moving. If one day the Moon mysteriously and suddenly stopped moving around Earth, it would fall upon the Earth pretty soon (in a few days), due to Earth's gravity.
NO it can not.
Well no because of the fact that the moon is stuck in the earths orbit and cant get out because it is to small to pull away from the earths orbit but really if you are talking about stop spinning then the answer is still no mostly because of the fact that because it is stuck in the earths orbit it has to stay in rotation just like the earth and also because one of our thoughts is the billions of years ago the earth (Young earth to be truthful) was hit by a small planet as big as the moon and the earth was still hardening so apart of it came of and the moon was made and the friction made by the hit made the moon and the earth start to rotate so does that answer your question? Well the moon move's away from the earth about 3 to 5 inches each year but no the moon will not stop:)
No, the spin of the earth is slowing (due to tidal friction with the moon) and the moon is being pushed further away all the time but the earth will not stop spinning. Also the earth orbits the Sun and this will continue as well.
If you mean, "will the tides ever stop", then the answer is, "not for billions of years". The main cause for tides is the moon which is slowly moving away from Earth at about 3.8 cm (1.5 inches) every year. This will not effect us in any way.
The only way the Earth's gravity would cease "pulling" on the Moon would be if the Earth itself were to be annihilated. Hopefully, this won't happen. If it did, though, the Moon would not stop moving due to the motion it is undergoing right now. Think of driving a car. When we let go of the accelerator, we stop applying a twisting force to the axle, meaning the car will no longer accelerate. It does not just stop instantly, of course. A force must be applied in order to slow the car down. This fact is due to its momentum--when an object is in motion, it has a certain amount of kinetic energy. The object will keep moving until work is done upon it, i.e. a force is applied over a distance, and the energy is depleted. The same laws of physics apply in space as they do on Earth, so the Moon is the same. The Earth's gravitational field is the accelerator keeping the Moon in orbit. What would happen to the Moon if the Earth were annihilated? It would fly off in a straight line, tangent to the path of its current orbit. If you swing a ball on a string around, like the slingshots of yore, and let the string go, the ball will fly off in a straight line tangent to the circle at whatever place it was let go.
The Moon would continue to orbit the Sun, possibly in a different orbit. Assuming the Moon kept its (Earth) orbital velocity, this would cause it to move either slightly closer or slightly farther from the Sun. The Moon's relative velocity to the Earth is about 1 km/sec whereas the Earth-Moon system orbits the Sun at 30 km/sec. The sudden disappearance of the Earth would mean the continuation of the Moon's solar orbit, albeit possibly altered.
No, the Earth will not stop moving for three days. The Earth rotates on its axis, causing day and night, and orbits the Sun, causing seasons. If the Earth were to suddenly stop moving, it would have catastrophic consequences for life on the planet.
No.