Gravity on the moon has exactly the same characteristics and behavior as it has on Earth and everywhere else. It causes a pair of forces between any two objects, that are proportional to the product of the objects' masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their centers. Because of the moon's much smaller mass, the force between the moon and an object on its surface is only about 16% as strong as the force between the Earth and the same object when the object is on the Earth's surface.
There is no relationship whatsoever between Earth's moon and any comet.
There's no connection between any moon phase and any pattern to the weather on earth.
No, Aristotle did not believe that a force acts on the Moon as it revolves around the Earth. He proposed that objects naturally move in a circular motion in the heavens and that the celestial bodies move due to their nature, not due to any external force.
Earth's Moon has no satellites of its own. While it might be possible, I am not aware of any moons that have natural satellites of their own.
Objects such as planets, moons and asteroids, and manmade objects like satellites.
The (our) moon rotates about its axis relative to objects in the solar system EXCEPT the earth. The moon shows one face to the earth because it is tidally locked.
There is no moon on Earth, but there is one orbiting it; we call it the moon.
Gravity is a thing that goes on between two objects, not just one. YOU ... or any other object ... weigh about 6.04 times as much on the Earth's surface as you weigh on the Moon's surface.
Because the gravitational force between any two objects depends on the product of both their masses. The object's weight on earth depends on the object's mass and the earth's mass, whereas its weight on the moon depends on the object's mass and the moon's mass. Since the moon's mass is very different from the earth's mass, the object's weight is also different there.
I am not entirely certain that I understand what you are asking. I will assume that you are asking this question: Given that the gravitational pull exerted by the earth is stronger than that exerted by the moon, what are the effects of the moon's gravitational pull on the earth?Even though we think of the moon circling the earth - as if the earth's gravity affected the moon but not vice versa - this is not strictly true. The earth and the moon actually revolve around a single common point located on the line joining their centres.The key point is this: Any body with mass, even only a tiny mass, will exert a gravitational pull on all other objects, no matter how massive those other objects are, and in some way "affect" those other objects.
Gravity on the moon has exactly the same characteristics and behavior as it has on Earth and everywhere else. It causes a pair of forces between any two objects, that are proportional to the product of the objects' masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their centers. Because of the moon's much smaller mass, the force between the moon and an object on its surface is only about 16% as strong as the force between the Earth and the same object when the object is on the Earth's surface.
Gravity on the moon has exactly the same characteristics and behavior as it has on Earth and everywhere else. It causes a pair of forces between any two objects, that are proportional to the product of the objects' masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their centers. Because of the moon's much smaller mass, the force between the moon and an object on its surface is only about 16% as strong as the force between the Earth and the same object when the object is on the Earth's surface.
the pull of earth's gravity makes any objects fall to the ground.As the moon goes around earth, its gravity pulls on earth causing water in the oceans to move toward the moon.Earths gravity also pulls on the moon.
Any two objects with mass will have a gravitational force. The orbit of planets around stars depends on the gravitational pull of the star. The Earth exerts a gravitational pull on its moon but the moon also exerts a pull on the Earth.
I am not entirely sure what you mean by "circled" (circular?).The Earth has approximately the shape of a sphere. That means that if you look at it from outside, from any angle, the profile will be close to a circle.
Yes. The moon is less massive and smaller than Earth, so the force of gravity on objects near the moon's surface is less than on Earth. The gravity of the moon is around 1/6 the gravity of the Earth. The acceleration of gravity on the moon is 1.6 meters per second per second.