Yes. Because of the centrifugal force, the Earth will be "catapulted" away from the sun.
But don't worry, there is no way that gravity disappears!
Actually the gravity cannot affect the suns movement. But without gravity, every planet would stop orbiting and sail off out of here in a straight line.
If there were no other forces, there would be nothing to stop gravity from pulling Earth together into an extremely small space.
Now this may surprise you, but it's 2018 and earth still has gravity. So I'm gonna go with no, in 2012 earth will not stop pulling gravity.
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.
If gravity or inertia were to suddenly stop working, the Earth would no longer be held in its orbit around the Sun and would go off into space in a straight line. It would no longer have the centripetal force needed to keep it in its circular orbit. The lack of gravity would also cause everything on Earth to float away into space.
Inertia and gravity cause a bowling ball to stop on earth.
GRAVITYThe acceleration due to gravity is a force related to Earth's mass and is not dependent on its rotation - gravity would not change if the Earth ceased to rotate. WEIGHT However, if the Earth ceased to rotate, someone standing on the equator would weigh more - this increase in weight effect would decrease as you moved the person to the poles to do the comparison.
if the earth stop rotating the gravity will not be there and finally we can all fly
In that case, the Moon would move in a straight line instead of moving around the Earth; it would quickly get away.
no because of the gravity of the sun wont let it stop orbitting because the gravitational pull and the spinning of the planets so it dosent go in to the sun
If the space station were to stop moving sideways, it would continue to orbit Earth due to the pull of gravity. However, without the horizontal velocity, it would fall back towards Earth rather than staying in a stable orbit. This would pose a significant danger to the crew and the station itself.
They would float and they would stop moving. If gravity were to cease, they would cease orbiting their sun. Their inertia would continue, sending them on a straight-line path in the direction they were traveling at the moment gravity stopped. If the planets themselves had no gravity, they would eventually start breaking apart, because gravity is probably the biggest single force holding large masses together. Magnetic forces would keep certain solid parts clumped together, but a planet with an atmosphere, for example, would lose the atmosphere completely.