On Earth, the Moon's orbit shows up as tides.
Not our (the Earth's) moon but Jupiter has lots of its own moons that orbit it.
Jupiter has four moons that orbit it. the names of these moons are IO (eye-oh) Callisto, Europa and Ganymede.Time taken for the moons to orbit Jupiter:IO- 1.7 Earth yearsCallisto- 16.7 Earth yearsEuropa- 3.5 Earth yearsGanymede- 7.1 Earth years
Earth is.
No. The moon's orbit is tilted by about 5 degrees relative to Earth's orbit around the sun. This is why we do not see eclipses every month.
Moons of planets are typically called natural satellites because they orbit a planet just like how the moon orbits Earth. These moons vary in size and composition depending on the planet they orbit.
yes
The moons gravitational pull on the earth lifts the Earth's oceans causing the ebb and flow of the tides.
Yes. One moon orbit Earth (The moon)
No
Not our (the Earth's) moon but Jupiter has lots of its own moons that orbit it.
Jupiter has four moons that orbit it. the names of these moons are IO (eye-oh) Callisto, Europa and Ganymede.Time taken for the moons to orbit Jupiter:IO- 1.7 Earth yearsCallisto- 16.7 Earth yearsEuropa- 3.5 Earth yearsGanymede- 7.1 Earth years
Not specifically. The Moon's gravity does cause Earth's tides, and tides do affect the weather, but weather is more of a local phenomenon.
its part of the roation and orbit of the earth. its an eclipse.
1 moon.
29.5 days.
no
elliptical orbit with earth at one focus.