because of the earth gravitational and magnetic pull
the moon flys away from the earth
Yes
The moon is moving away from the Earth at a rate of about 3.8 centimetres - or 1.5 inches - per year.
About 1 second away every 50,000 years
The Moon doesn't move away from Earth significantly due to the gravitational pull that Earth exerts on it. While the Moon is slowly drifting away at a rate of about 3.8 centimeters per year, this is balanced by its orbital motion. The gravitational force keeps the Moon in a stable orbit, preventing it from drifting too far away. Additionally, the tidal interactions between the Earth and Moon create a complex dynamic that helps maintain this balance.
The moon moves away from Earth at a rate of approximately 1.5 inches (3.8 cm) per year due to tidal forces. This gradual drift is caused by the transfer of Earth's rotational energy to the moon's orbital motion.
There's no limit to the distance at which Earth's gravity is effective, and no limit to the distance that two bodies can separate and still move in mutual gravitational orbits.
The Earth's atmosphere moves right along with the Earth. If it didn't, then anybody standing on the equator would be standing in a 1,000 mph wind !
The moon is drifting away from earth at a rate of about 38 millimeters per year. So in 1 million years, the moon will have drifted another 38 kilometers or abour 24 miles further from Earth.
The moon does slowly move away from earth at an estimated two inches every year, it is a possibility that (if you believe in the apocalypse) the cause for the fall of Earth is the moon losing its orbit with earth and drifting away.
If there were no centripetal force acting on the moon, it would move in a straight line at a constant velocity tangent to its orbit. This would cause it to travel in a straight path away from its current orbit, eventually moving away from Earth instead of staying in a stable orbit.
Yes. The moon orbits the Earth. Yes The moon orbits the earth. It is also coincidental that as it does so it revolves on its own axis once whic causes the same face of the moom to always face the earth.