Physics, asked by Anonymous, 10 months ago

Will we really loose our satellite-moon 'cause it goes 1 cm apart every year!!​

Answers

Answered by sy7754
1

Answer:

Yes it is sure

Explanation:

Our dream will come true

Answered by deepthisree567kd
0

Answer:

The moon is probably never going to leave us.

Explanation:

There is no well-defined scientific scenario in which the moon ever escapes from the earth, and even the long-shot possibility emerges only long after Earth has been largely destroyed by the sun.

when you try to get into the details of what exactly happens to the moon in the future, however-then things get complicated.

Right now, the moon is moving away from the Earth at a rate of about four cms per year, due to the tidal interaction between the Earth and Moon. At a basic level, the moon's gravity exerts a drag on the Earth that slows it's rotation,and the earth's gravity exerts a pull on the Moon that expands it's orbit. The two effects balance out, conserving angular momentum.

The four cm per year motion is only the current rate of movement. The strength of the tidal effect varies greatly depending on configuration of the continents and the oceans, and even on the Earth's internal structure. For a more reliable prediction, scientists look at the inferred average rate of change in the Moon's orbit over the past four billion years.

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