No, it will not. When the sun goes 'supernova' roughly 4.5 billion years from now, it will expand and eat up Mercury and venus, and the heat and gases will burn earth to a cinder. No water and little or no atmosphere will remain. The sun will collapse into its final stage as a white dwarf, and earth will more than likely remain a charred and lifeless satelite of the 'sun'.
They do not actually float. The moon is constantly pulled toward Earth by gravity, but it is moving "sideways" rather quickly relative to Earth so it has quite a bit of momentum. By the time it would have fallen to Earth it has missed. This is how an orbit works. Similarly Earth orbits the sun and the sun orbits the center of the galaxy.
The earth will just float into space, however the Earth can not get out of the solar system because of the sun's gravitational pull.
Saturn because if you put it on a river big enough it would float.
Earth does not float. It orbits the sun. Orbit around an object is a form of free fall. In simple terms, Earth is continually pulled toward the sun by gravity, but it is moving so fat that it constantly misses. Earth does not fall due to its own gravity because that gravity is towards its center. Earth's surface is supported by the layers of rock and metal beneath.
we would eventully float to far from the sun and everything would freeze.
The sun doesn't float because it is made of gas and fire.The sun is basically a big giant ball of gas and fire.So it is impossible for the sun to float. If you think anything else wrong!
no
No
float
The Earth is not floating in space; it is actually orbiting the Sun due to gravitational forces. It is not sitting on anything specific but is instead held in its orbit by the gravitational pull of the Sun.
Given that you live when you are there, it would be determined by knowing the density of the sun's surface compared the yours
because the earths orbit path around the sun keeps up in place. kinda like gravity :) / it is gravity -.-