2000 miles ... then you will run into a black hole which will then take you to a portal that takes you back to your house....shortly after you will die from a hernia
No. The stars are far beyond any noticeable effects of Earth's gravity. The stars are also far larger and more massive than Earth is, so if Earth were ever to run into one it would be more accurate to say that Earth would fall into the star.
The forces of gravity between two objects fall off as the square of the distance between them.If you were three times as far from the center of the Earth as you are now,then the forces of gravity between you and the Earth would be1 / (3^2) = 1/9 of what they are now.Putting it simply, your weight would be 1/9 of what it is down here on the surface.
Sir Issac Newton is rolling in his grave... The answer is Gravity, essentially, everything is pulled toward the center of the earth. Gravity causes things to fall and gives everything on earth weight
No, it is not possible to fall off the Moon. The Moon has gravity, although its gravity is weaker than Earth's. If someone were to jump off the Moon's surface, they would eventually fall back due to its gravitational pull.
To escape Earth's orbit, an object must reach a distance known as the Hill sphere, which is around 1.5 million kilometers from Earth. Beyond this point, the gravitational influence of the Earth is weakened by the influence of the Sun.
No, the earth is round as far as I know
the earth doesnt fall.
They believed it was like a giant plane, and that if you went too far toward the horizon you would fall off the edge of the earth.
No, you cannot fall off the edge of the world. The Earth is a sphere, so there is no physical edge to fall off.
In a sense they are continually falling to Earth, but they are so far away that the curve of their fall is big enough to follow the circumference of the Earth.
We don't fall off the Earth because of gravity. Gravity is the force that pulls objects towards the center of the Earth, keeping us and everything else on the surface.
Gravity.
Gravity.
Yes, the realization that the earth really is round instead of flat, and that he didn't fall off the edge if he went too far.
The ancient authorities believed that the earth was flat, and that if you went very far west from Europe, you would fall off the edge of the earth.
No. The stars are far beyond any noticeable effects of Earth's gravity. The stars are also far larger and more massive than Earth is, so if Earth were ever to run into one it would be more accurate to say that Earth would fall into the star.
It is simple when the earth stops turning we will slowly lose gravity causing the peeps in Antarctica to fall off so i suggest you go there and wait for the world to stop spinning