It does. When you jump, both you and the Earth move apart, and then fall back together.
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. After the jump, the equation m(person)*v(person) = - m(earth)*v(earth).
A typical person weights 70 kg, and the Earth weighs approximately 6,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kg. So to make the equation equal, the velocity of the Earth is about 1/85000000000000000000000 as much as the velocity of the person. This is really too small to notice by any current means of measurement.
because the earth has good food
you can't see it moving because your moving with it
When you jump, Earth's gravity pulls you back down. The force of gravity acting on you is much stronger than your upward jump force, so you are pulled back towards the ground rather than Earth being pulled towards you. This is due to Earth's much larger mass compared to yours.
When you jump in the air, you already have the same momentum as the spot you jumped from because you and the earth are moving together. The Earth's rotation doesn't affect your jump because the atmosphere moves along with the Earth as well.
no it isnt its 2
there isnt one so tough
What do you mean? If I jump up, I fall back down - and I fall towards Earth.
When you jump out of a plane, you experience the force of gravity pulling you towards the Earth. This force causes you to accelerate as you fall towards the ground. The force of gravity acting on you is roughly 9.8 meters per second squared.
While you are moving, jump (wile moving). Once you land jump again (still moving same direction). Jump one more time exactly as you land (while moving in the same direction) to do the triple jump and get a little higher.
That was the way most people thought centuries ago. We now know without a doubt that Earth orbits the sun. The reason we fall back to the same place on Earth after jumping is because we are moving with Earth and continue to do so because momentum is conserved. An object in motion will stay in motion at the same speed and in the same direction unless it is acted upon by an outside force. If you are flying on a passenger jet and jump up, you will land on the same spot on the floor that you jumped from because you are moving at the same speed as the plane.
most likely if you are moving fast you will role the opposite direction that the car is moving. but the best bet is to never jump out of a moving car.
Jump from your position towards the tip of the surface. From there, you will be soaring in the air towards your target. It works on ice.