The Earth is not going to collide with Mercury. They both have stable orbits, and will stay millions of miles apart.
The gravity on Mercury is less than that of the Earth, so the force going down would be less as well.
If Mercury were to collide with Earth, it would result in catastrophic consequences, including massive destruction, widespread fires and earthquakes, and a global extinction event. The impact would likely create a large crater and release an enormous amount of energy. Thankfully, the likelihood of such an event is extremely low.
In going away from the sun Mercury comes before Venus and Earth comes after.
Earth has 2.54 times the surface area of Mercury. Earth-12,756 km Mercury-4,880 km
The gravity on Mercury is 38% of Earth's gravity. So, if you were 150mlbs on Earth, you would be 57 lbs on Mercury.
No.
because it is going further an inch every year.
Not with earth specifically, but it will eventually collide with the Milky Way Galaxy. Galaxies are mostly empty space, so when this collision occurs the chances of earth suffering a collision as a result are negligible.
Mercury is smart lttle aliens while earth is being reported by god and its going to rain on saturday
No.
The solar system (the planets, the earth and the sun) is a part of the milky way, and rotates with the other stars the milky way consists of. The milky way is therefore not going to collide with the earth.
The missle is going to collide into the boat. The missles are to collide into the submerine.
earth plates can and do collide, even though the earth rotates around the sun
no i dont think so because if you live on mercury your going to need oxygen, on mercury, and no it doesn't exist.
The gravity on Mercury is less than that of the Earth, so the force going down would be less as well.
Mercury's diameter is about a third that of Earth.
If Mercury were to collide with Earth, it would result in catastrophic consequences, including massive destruction, widespread fires and earthquakes, and a global extinction event. The impact would likely create a large crater and release an enormous amount of energy. Thankfully, the likelihood of such an event is extremely low.