If the moon were to leave orbit we would notice that the tides are less extreme. Also anything that relies on the light reflected off the moon would be negatively affected. However the moon may not ever leave orbit, but it is a possibility.
The Moon does not orbit the Sun; it orbits the Earth. The Earth orbits the Sun.
The Earth-Moon gravitational interaction that produces the tides is gradually slowing the Earth's rotation. So, the Earth loses angular momentum. That causes the Moon to gain angular momentum. The acceleration of the Moon causes its orbit to slowly get larger. See "related links" below. In the link, look for the headings "Tidal Braking of the Earth" and "Lunar Recession".
The moon is in constant orbit around the earth, all the time.
It takes the Moon about 27.3 Earth days to orbit around the Earth.
It happens because the Moon's orbit is tilted relative to the Earth's orbit, so at Full Moon the Moon actually passes above or below the point where it is exactly in line with the Sun and Earth. For an eclipse to happen the Moon has to be in a special part of its orbit where its own orbit crosses the plane of the Earth's orbit. The point where it crosses over is a node, and it passes an ascending node and a descending node every time it goes round.
The Moon does not orbit the Sun; it orbits the Earth. The Earth orbits the Sun.
It is called Apsis. The point in the moon's orbit where that happens is the apogee of the orbit.
The moon orbits Earth.
The perigee is the part of the Moon's orbit when the Moon is closest to the Earth. This happens once a month.
A full moon occurs when the moon is opposite the sun in its orbit, which is known as the "opposition" phase. This means that the sun, Earth, and moon are all in a straight line, with Earth in the middle.
This is called its orbit. Strictly, the moon and the earth both orbit their common centre of mass. The path of the moon around Earth is elliptical orbit. It takes about 29 days to complete one orbit of earth by moon.
The moon orbits the earth. When you can not see it, it is on the other side of the earth. That happens once a day as the earth spins on its axis.
The Earth-Moon gravitational interaction that produces the tides is gradually slowing the Earth's rotation. So, the Earth loses angular momentum. That causes the Moon to gain angular momentum. The acceleration of the Moon causes its orbit to slowly get larger. See "related links" below. In the link, look for the headings "Tidal Braking of the Earth" and "Lunar Recession".
The moon is in constant orbit around the earth, all the time.
Yes. One moon orbit Earth (The moon)
the moon takes 27.32 days to orbit the earth
there are roughly 12.5 looner orbits to 1 orbit of the earth The moon takes 27.32 days to orbit the Earth.