ummmmmmmmmm yea i dont know thats why i came here!
Well you know what people, no one really cares for what you put. We need the right answer!!!
pine mountain was formed by a constructive force. earth's plates colliding created pine mountain.
No, you would not fall off the earth if it stopped spinning. Earth's gravity, which holds you onto the planet now, will still hold you onto itself.if wat u mean is lik if the earth suddenly stopped spinning would u fall off;obviously impossible, but if it was to happen u would not fall off but u would get shot a few miles in the direction that the eaarth was spinning before due to ur enertia (aka an object in motion will stay in motion until acted upon by another force... lik the wall). tht would b cool though if u didnt die from it. and even cooler if u were in a helecopter. o.o if u were hovering still in connecticut, the next second you'd b in lik new york. ud b lik wtf? this thing has more kick than i thought. so to answer ur question briefly, if the earth suddenly stopped spinning, u would not fall off... but it would b very painful. but if u mean tht if the earth stopped spinning would there still b gravity, then yes there would still b gravety. all matter makes gravity. spinning doesnt make gravity. gravity is caused by the way tht matter creates a warp in the fabric of space time. other objects tend to fall into it if close enough. (u make gravity too) so lik ya tht pretty much covers it.
The force of gravity is both everywhere around and inside Earth.
Attraction to the Earth is caused by the force of gravity.
My reason that the rotation of the earth is when The seasons are explained by the tilt of the Earths axis. When it is summer in the Northern Hemisphere, the north pole is pointed in the direction of the sun. the tilt of the Earth isn't what changes seasons, but the the Earth's revolution around the sun does. The Earth revolves around the sun so different parts of the Earth are more affected by the sun then other parts through out the year. The seasons are NOT determined by the distance of the Earth to the Sun. In fact, the Earth is closest to the Sun in the Northern hemisphere's Winter (January) sincerely happiness ok ok bye hope you like this if you do please call 862-956-2233
Gravataional force is applied by the spinning of the earth.
No, the atmosphere is held in place by gravity, not centripetal force. If the earth stopped spinning, there would be no coriolis force though. This would stop deflecting the moving air in the atmosphere.
Earth Defense Force was created on 1991-10-25.
When the earth is spinning, the rotation along with gravity creates centrifugal force. This is the same as the force that happens when you swing a yo-yo around by the string, the string is like gravity in that scenario holding the yo-yo close to you.
No. Once an object starts spinning it does not need anything to keep it spinning. In fact it would take a force to stop the rotation. Earth has been rotating since it first formed and its angular momentum has kept it spinning.
No, it is the mass of the Earth that keeps it spinning steadily. The Earth is in free fall going round the Sun so it feels no force on it. The force is exactly balanced by acceleration towards the Sun. But because the Earth is big and the Sun relatively close, the point of Earth nearest the Sun (where the Sun is overhead) has a little more force than the centre, and twice as much as at the opposite point, and the difference is called a tidal force.
Prefectural Earth Defense Force was created on 1986-03-21.
Centrifugal force .
used by spinning motion of the earth around its axis passing through the poles...the force being max at the equator...since at tym of formation, earth was in fluid state, the force of cohesion was small & could not balance the centrifugal force...hence it bulged out at the equator
The earth wont stop spinning unless something big hits it - then we would all die from the collision. A counter rotational force is required to stop the earths spin, otherwise it will just go on rotating.
"Wobble" isn't a very precise term.The Earth has a small, short period "wobble" simply due to the fact that it isn't perfectly symmetrical and balanced.This also causes a small, longer period "wobble" due to the effect of the Moon's gravity on the (slightly asymmetric) Earth.And there are wobbles due to other (and to me unknown) causes.But I suspect what you're talking about is what's technically called precession, which has a special name because it's a very particular type of "wobble". The Earth precesses on its axis in a cycle lasting about 29,000 years. Because of this, Summer 15,000 years ago ... or 15,000 years from now... would have occurred in the northern hemisphere in December rather than June.
Centripetal force.