Earthquakes can affect the Earth's axis by redistributing mass within the planet, which can lead to slight shifts in its rotation. For instance, significant seismic events, like the 2004 Sumatra earthquake, can cause changes in the Earth's moment of inertia, potentially altering the length of a day by microseconds and slightly modifying the tilt of the Earth's axis. These shifts are generally minor and not perceptible in everyday life but are measurable with precise instruments.
Here are some sentences.The axis of our planet is tilted.Who were the Axis powers in World War II?
No for it does not affect the axis for some reasons.
they named this natural disaster earthquakes because earth is the land and quake means vibration on earth together it means a vibration on the earth surface
no
The axis is actually an imaginary line that the Earth spins around. It represents the tilt of the Earth relative to its orbit.
It doesn't necessarily affect space itself but it can affect the Earth's tilt or axis in space.
It's a shift in the Earth's tectonic plates.
No, it only effects parts of earth. Earthquakes don't affect the whole solar system. That's why they call them earthquakes. Because they happen on the earth and the earth only.
The degree of tilt to the Earth caused by the Japanese earthquake in 2011 was estimated to be about 25 centimeters (10 inches). This tilt led to a shift in the Earth's axis by about 10 cm (4 inches), which shortened the length of a day by around 1.8 microseconds.
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.
Hell if I know.
If you mean the Axis of the Earth, yes it did. By 6 degrees.
if the axis is over 90 degrees to the norh as it is in the summer
What? No...the earths axis has been tilted for hundreds of millions if not billions of years. If your question is: Did the earthquake in Chile cause a variation in the tilt of the earth's axis? Then the answer is yes, very slightly, but noticeable.
i kills them most of the time
No, seasons are primarily caused by the tilt of the Earth's axis as it orbits the sun. The precession of Earth's axis does affect the timing of the seasons over long periods of time, but it is not the primary cause of the seasons.
The same way it affects most of earth. The seasons are caused by the tilt of the earth's axis relative to the plane of its orbit.