Mainly because the earth has 82 times the mass of the moon.
Even though the surface of the earth is more than 3 times as far from its center
as the surface of the moon is from its center, that's not enough to cancel the
effect of the earth's much larger mass.
Yes, the Earth and Moon both exert a gravitational force on each other. This force is responsible for the Moon orbiting around the Earth.
Both you and the Earth exert gravitational forces on each other, but the force from the Earth is significantly larger due to its massive size. While you attract the Earth, the gravitational pull you feel is primarily due to the Earth's much greater mass. Thus, the Earth is effectively the stronger attractor in this interaction.
elephant truck A basketball Your hand a camel NOT A BIKE!
Anything with mass include you and me do exert gravitational force but the earth is massive so it exert more force than any of any small object including us on earth. The gravitational force is done between two mass in following general gravitational law by Newton. F = G.M1m2/R2 We sum up G.M1/R2 as gravity = 9.81 m/s2 for M1 is earth and R = earth radius Between 2 man with m1 and m2 respectively, gravitational force between these two man is at F = G.m1m2/L2 where L = distance between center of mass (you and me for instance). Gravitational force is small compare to earth's gravitational force but it does exist.
They exert Gravitational Force on each other. It is a force which is directly proportional to Mass of the object
its bigger
The bigger an object is, the more gravity it has! Earth is much bigger than the moon, therefore it has stronger gravity.
Earth exerts a stronger gravitational force than the moon due to its larger mass. The force of gravity is directly proportional to an object's mass, so Earth's greater mass results in a stronger gravitational pull compared to the moon.
Yes, the Earth and Moon both exert a gravitational force on each other. This force is responsible for the Moon orbiting around the Earth.
Though the moon is closer, it is relatively small compared to the sun. The sun is much larger and exerts a far stronger gravitational force.
no they don't
False. The Moon orbits around Earth due to Earth's gravitational pull, but the Sun also exerts a gravitational force on the Moon. The combined gravitational forces of Earth and the Sun control the Moon's orbit.
Both you and the Earth exert gravitational forces on each other, but the force from the Earth is significantly larger due to its massive size. While you attract the Earth, the gravitational pull you feel is primarily due to the Earth's much greater mass. Thus, the Earth is effectively the stronger attractor in this interaction.
elephant truck A basketball Your hand a camel NOT A BIKE!
This is due to the differential gravitational force caused by the varying distances between the Earth and the sun/moon. The closer side experiences a stronger gravitational pull compared to the farther side, resulting in tidal forces that create high and low tides on Earth.
Anything with mass include you and me do exert gravitational force but the earth is massive so it exert more force than any of any small object including us on earth. The gravitational force is done between two mass in following general gravitational law by Newton. F = G.M1m2/R2 We sum up G.M1/R2 as gravity = 9.81 m/s2 for M1 is earth and R = earth radius Between 2 man with m1 and m2 respectively, gravitational force between these two man is at F = G.m1m2/L2 where L = distance between center of mass (you and me for instance). Gravitational force is small compare to earth's gravitational force but it does exist.
They exert Gravitational Force on each other. It is a force which is directly proportional to Mass of the object