The common center of gravity, or barycenter, of the Earth and Moon is located inside the Earth, about 4,600 kilometers (approximately 2,900 miles) from the Earth's center. This point lies beneath the Earth's surface because the Earth is significantly more massive than the Moon. The barycenter moves as the Moon orbits the Earth, but it remains within Earth's volume due to the mass difference.
That is called "tides". __________________________ Sort of. The Moon doesn't really orbit the Earth. Rather, the Earth and the Moon BOTH orbit the "common center of mass" of the Earth/Moon system. That common center of mass is inside the Earth, but not AT the center of the Earth. (If the common center of mass or 'center of gravity' were outside the Earth and somewhere in between the Earth and the Moon, then technically the Moon wouldn't be a "moon"; it would be a co-planet with Earth.) Tides are actually caused by the fact that the water on the far side of the Earth and the water on the near side of the Earth (with respect to the Moon) are technically in the "wrong" orbits around the Moon. Remember, gravity goes both ways! The water on the far side of the Earth is orbiting too fast and should move into a higher orbit; the water on the near side is orbiting too slowly and should fall into a lower orbit, from the perspective of the Moon. Because the Earth's gravity is much stronger than the Moon's gravity, the effects are actually quite small.
Because earth is more massive than the moon. Mass and gravity are positively correlated; the more mass a body has, the stronger its gravity. 1. the earth is larger then the moon and it has electic forces that allow the gravity to be much stronger on the earth then on the moon. 2. the more mass the object has the stronger force of gravity is has 3. if the earth had no gravity there would be no human existence, the moon wouldn't exist and even our plant would exist, the formation of the earth occurred due to the gravitation pull of the magnetic polls on the earth.
The gravity is less on the moon than on Earth because the Earth has about 80 times as much mass as the Moon has. The diameter of the Moon also affects it. If the diameter is bigger, that puts you farther away from the center, and the gravitational force decreases.
"The moon has more gravity than the earth." is a question (about the moon and gravity).
There is gravity on the moon. The moon's gravity is much weaker than Earth's because the moon has less mass.
The Earth. Actually, technically, the Moon and Earth revolve around a common center of gravity, but that center of gravity falls within the earth itself.
Because the Earth and the moon are bound by the laws of gravity to revolve around each others common center of gravity.
It does. The moon's gravity pulls on Earth with exactly the same amount of force as Earth's gravity pulls on the moon. However, since Earth has about 80 times more mass than the moon, it experiences about 1/80 the acceleration that the moon does. Rather than the moon simply orbiting Earth, the two revolve around a common center of mass, which is inside Earth, but closer to Earth's surface than it is to the center.
The Earth's gravity pulls the Moon towards it and its center.
The Earth's motion around a center of mass is due to the presence of the Moon. Technically, the Moon doesn't orbit the Earth, they both orbit the center of mass they share, which is about 4661 kilometers from the center of the Earth. In astronomy, the center of mass is also commonly referred to as the barycenter.
It's all about gravity. The moon and earth each orbit around the 'barycenter', the center of gravity of the earth-moon system. this point is within the body of earth itself.
That is called "tides". __________________________ Sort of. The Moon doesn't really orbit the Earth. Rather, the Earth and the Moon BOTH orbit the "common center of mass" of the Earth/Moon system. That common center of mass is inside the Earth, but not AT the center of the Earth. (If the common center of mass or 'center of gravity' were outside the Earth and somewhere in between the Earth and the Moon, then technically the Moon wouldn't be a "moon"; it would be a co-planet with Earth.) Tides are actually caused by the fact that the water on the far side of the Earth and the water on the near side of the Earth (with respect to the Moon) are technically in the "wrong" orbits around the Moon. Remember, gravity goes both ways! The water on the far side of the Earth is orbiting too fast and should move into a higher orbit; the water on the near side is orbiting too slowly and should fall into a lower orbit, from the perspective of the Moon. Because the Earth's gravity is much stronger than the Moon's gravity, the effects are actually quite small.
The Earth orbits the Sun, and the Moon orbits the Earth. Technically these bodies revolve around their common center of gravity, but in both cases that point is within the larger of the two.
Not sure what you are looking for here. Earth and moon revolve around each others common center of gravity. This center is also referred to as the barycenter. Look this up on the web and you'll find some very interesting things about the unique earth/moon relationship.
All three rotate around a common center of gravity. Since the sun is so big, the common center is within it, so we can say that the Earth - Moon pair rotates around the sun. Since the Earth is so much larger than the moon, the same is true and you can say that the moon rotates around the Earth. But note that the moon never goes "backward", both Earth and the Moon follow a wavy path around the sun.
Earth's gravity is a force that pulls objects towards its center. It gives weight to objects and keeps the Moon in orbit around the Earth. The strength of Earth's gravity decreases with distance from its center.
The moon is way smaller than the earth and its gravity level is lower. Which makes people weigh less on the moon.