The sun does not orbit or move around the Earth and moon because the Earth has to orbit the sun while the moon orbits the earth.
Yes, the Earth and Moon both exert a gravitational force on each other. This force is responsible for the Moon orbiting around the Earth.
Gravity is the force responsible for pulling the moon and Earth toward each other. This force keeps the moon in orbit around the Earth and causes tides on Earth.
because the moon has an orbit that goes around the earth which is a path that the moon takes so it will not bump into any other planets
Yes, though to an unequal extent. For Earth's part, it has enough attraction on the moon to keep it orbiting continually around us. For the moon's part, it has enough attraction on the earth to cause tides, and to a lesser extent the precession of the equinoxes.
The gravitational interaction of the Earth and Moon produces a number of effects. The most obvious of these is the orbital motion of the Moon around the Earth, but there is also a motion of the Earth around the center of mass of the Earth-Moon system, tidal effects on the Earth and Moon and professional effects on the Earth's axis of rotation.
The moon circles around the earth; the earth circles around the sun.
Moon revolves around Earth, Earth revolves around Sun.
Yes, the Earth and Moon both exert a gravitational force on each other. This force is responsible for the Moon orbiting around the Earth.
Gravity is the force responsible for pulling the moon and Earth toward each other. This force keeps the moon in orbit around the Earth and causes tides on Earth.
because the moon has an orbit that goes around the earth which is a path that the moon takes so it will not bump into any other planets
It orbits around Earth because of the mutual gravitational forces between the Earth and the Moon, which attract them to each other.
Yes, though to an unequal extent. For Earth's part, it has enough attraction on the moon to keep it orbiting continually around us. For the moon's part, it has enough attraction on the earth to cause tides, and to a lesser extent the precession of the equinoxes.
The gravitational interaction of the Earth and Moon produces a number of effects. The most obvious of these is the orbital motion of the Moon around the Earth, but there is also a motion of the Earth around the center of mass of the Earth-Moon system, tidal effects on the Earth and Moon and professional effects on the Earth's axis of rotation.
The moon orbits the Earth due to the gravitational pull the two bodies have on each other.
because while they are within the suns gravitational field they are both being affected with the same pull so it would not cause them to crash into each other because they are orbiting in a separate system. The Earth and Moon are both orbiting the center of mass of the Earth-Moon system. In slightly simplified terms the Moon orbits the Earth. That orbit is stable, so they keep their distance from each other. The Earth-Moon system then orbits the Sun.
The moon orbits the earth. How do we know the earth doesn't orbit the moon? The planet with the bigger mass, therefore stronger gravity, is the one controlling the other, so since the earth is bigger than the moon, the moon orbits the earth, not vice versa. It's best to think of the Earth and Moon as one system. Each body attracts the other, in accordance with Newton's Law of Gravitation. Earth and Moon orbit around their common "center of mass". Because the Earth has about 80 times the mass of the Moon, this center of mass is actually inside the surface of the Earth.
They rotate around each other, and work together to create tides.