the moon orbits around the planet, not the other way around; gravity keeps it orbiting
The flag remains on the Moon .
Preferably not like a Jew, even better if you had blond hair, fair skin and blue eyes.
they were very kind and nice and were usually married around 12yrs old. They had to stay and work while there husbands went out to war and jobs.
half the moon showing
stay low and out of site
Planets have a gravitational pull. It is just strong enough for moons to stay in orbit.
I have no clue!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I hope this helps alot!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The moons stay in orbit around Jupiter due to the planet's strong gravitational pull. This gravitational force keeps the moons in check and prevents them from moving away into space. They orbit around Jupiter because of the balance between their inertia and the gravitational force pulling them towards the planet.
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Because they're in the gravitational pull of the sun known as orbit
The moons are around planets, planets are around the sun. But basically the orbit is a mix of forward momentum and the the pull towards the sun, this creats an angular movement. when the planet moves forward, this angular movement is now forward momentum and gravity is still pulling it towards the sun creating a angular movement and when added together this is roughly a circle that goes all around the sun.
Nicolaus Copernicus discovered why planets stay in orbit when he found that the planets revolve around the sun. He is credited with starting the Scientific Revolution through this discovery.
Sir Isac Newton was the scientist who discovered why the planets stay in orbit.
The Moon, Sun and planets all appear in a strip of sky called the ecliptic. It is a plane defined by the plane of the Earth's orbit and the Sun is always on the ecliptic, while the Moon and planets stay close to it.
because the planets' gravity pull them so that they do not go away and the moons revolve around them with a constant speed so they stay in their orbit
The planets stay in orbit because of the gravitational attraction between the individual planets and the sun. Their rotational velocity makes them stay in a stable orbit instead of spiraling into it.
Jordan Grant & Leshonte Missick