Physics, asked by bhagchandaniaarambha, 2 days ago

Measurement to count the distance of earth and moon?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

385006

Explanation:

The time-averaged distance between the centers of Earth and the Moon is 385,000.6 km (239,228.3 mi). The actual distance varies over the course of the orbit of the Moon, from 356,500 km (221,500 mi) at the perigee to 406,700 km (252,700 mi) at apogee, resulting in a differential range of 50,200 km (31,200 mi).

Answered by qwcules
1

The measurement to count the distance between the earth and the moon is any unit of distance.

  • The distance from the Moon to the world is measured in any unit of distance.
  • It is, of course, constant because of the distance from the world to the Moon, and also the distance varies from a point of periapsis (closest to the Earth) to apogee (farthest from the Earth).
  • Today, the quality unit in the rural area is 362.6 to 405.4 Mm, in megameters.
  • However, though this is often the quality unit of measurement for distances of this size, in an exceedingly quirk of metric users, metric linear unit ar ne'er used — kilometre.
  • This is often expressed as362,600 to 405,400 km or kilometres.

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