No.
Hopefully, this is a thought experiment! It is gravitational attraction that keeps objects "stuck" to the Earth, so if the Earth split into half, you would still be attracted to it - although by half as much (as the mass of the Earth would have been halved). So you still couldn't fall off.
It is clearly false. The Axis were the enemy and comprised of Nazi Germany, Austria, Italy and Japan. You may have been slightly misled by the fact that the Channel Islands ( a small British protectorate) and situated off the coast of France, were occupied by German troops from 1940 to 1945.
Nope. Clemente almost did. The closest I have ever see was Sosa's Home Run that hit the Camera Booth in center field and that ball was at least 30 feet from the Scoreboard. Although no batted baseball has ever been hit from homeplate off of the center field scoreboard, it is not true that NO ball has ever accomplished that feat. Sam Snead, of professional golfing fame, accomplished it by driving a golfball off a tee at homeplate in 1951, which struck the scoreboard.
Yes, July 2nd, 2012, Pirates hitters Garrett Jones and Niel Walker did, both off the the right field pole.
no i couldn't because it would only tear half of califorinia off the face of the earth Improved Answer- No. the world will only end in 4.5 billion years when the sun swells up to become a red giant and enters the earths orbit and over heats earth and kills us all.
The earth is tilted 23.5 degrees
No, the Chilean Earthquake did not knock the Earth off its axis. Earthquakes can cause localized changes in the Earth's rotation, but they do not have the capability to shift the entire axis of the Earth.
no it is not. the earth is straight up and down. so is the sun.
There is no known event that has moved the Earth off its axis significantly. The Earth's tilt on its axis does change slightly over thousands of years due to gravitational influences from other celestial bodies, but these changes are gradual and not caused by a single cataclysmic event.
No one has ever been to Jupiter. At least not yet.
No, it is highly unlikely that Earth will spin off its axis. The Earth's axial tilt is relatively stable, and any changes in its rotation are gradual and natural. Significant events would be required to cause such a dramatic shift.
Earth is tilted at an angle of approximately 23.5 degrees off its axis. This tilt is what causes the changing of seasons as Earth orbits the sun.
Everyone would die.
Earth's magnetic axis is tilted at an angle of approximately 11 degrees from its geographic axis. This means that the magnetic north pole is not exactly aligned with the geographic north pole. The tilt causes compass needles to point slightly off from true north in certain locations.
first off it's not imaginary its an orbit another thing the earth spins on is it's axis
The biggest impact on earth was believed to have been the time when our Moon was formed. A Mars-sized planet crashed into earth at an extremely high velocity, causing our earth to rotate on its axis. A lot of the material that was blown off by this impact eventually clumped together and became our Moon.
No, Earth's magnetic poles are not located exactly on its geographical poles. The magnetic poles are located slightly off-axis and can shift over time due to changes in the Earth's magnetic field.