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  • Does the moon rotate on its axis? - Physics Forums
    The moon is rotating around its own axis, one revolution around the its own axis in the same time that it takes to make one full circle around the earth One way to see this is to imagine that you are hovering motionless in space (relative to the earth) somewhere outside the moon's orbit, and looking in the direction of the earth
  • Unraveling the Mystery of the Moons Non-Spinning Rotation
    To anticipate your next question of "Why does the moon rotate in the the same time as it orbits the Earth?", the answer is "tides" Just as the Moon causes tides on the Earth, the Earth exerts a tidal force on the Moon This force tends to stretch the moon out online the line joining it to the Earth
  • Am I looking at the moon upside down here in the US?
    The moon does go counterclockwise around the earth (viewed from above the earth's north pole) And both the moon and the earth rotate that way too But that means that the moon's north pole is at the top when viewed from the US, not the bottom You are 100% correct that, if you go to the southern hemisphere, the moon is upside down as compared to the northern hemisphere They would probably
  • The Moons Rotation and Why it Doesnt Spin: Theories and Explanations
    The discussion revolves around the Moon's rotation and its gravitational locking to the Earth, exploring theories and explanations for why we only see one side of the Moon Participants also draw comparisons with Uranus and other celestial bodies, touching on concepts of rotation, gravitational effects, and orbital mechanics Some participants assert that the Moon does not rotate on its axis
  • Why does the Moon rotate around the Earth? • Physics Forums
    The orbit of the moon around the sun is always curved towards the sun, so from that point of view it would be difficult to see the moon as going around the earth However, from the point of view of the earth, the moon rotates about the earth
  • orbit - Does the Moon really go around the Earth? - Astronomy Stack . . .
    The trajectory of the centre of mass of the Earth and Moon may be approximated by an ellipse The actual trajectory of the moon is more complex and is perturbed by the sun, the non-spherical shape of the Earth, the other planets and other more minor effects (including a correction for Relativity) So the moon really does go around the Earth
  • The moons rotation - Astronomy Stack Exchange
    Even if you don't change the orientation of the object, it's now upside-down Which is all to say, for the purpose of a game, you don't need to rotate your moon image, just keep it in the same orientation relative to north as it moves across, and that's going to look like what the real moon does
  • Moons orbit around the Sun - Astronomy Stack Exchange
    The Moon formed at four to six Earth radii, far less than the 40 6 Earth radii figure cited above The Moon's orbit initially looked like your second image Do Natural Satellites of other planets also follow the same orbit around the Sun? The massive planets are much further from the Sun than is the Earth and are much more massive than is the
  • Why is the Moons orbit so complicated? - Astronomy Stack Exchange
    The other fact that makes its orbit complex is that the moon is the closest moon to the sun, so solar perturbation is more significant than for other moons Solar perturbation is the main cause of the periodic variation in inclination and the various other forms of precession seen in the moon's orbit
  • Help me better understand how the plane of Moons orbit around Earth . . .
    The "wobbling" (called 'precession') of the Earth's axis of rotation is the 26000 year cycle The Moon's plane of orbit also precesses around this same imaginary vertical axis, which is the 18 6 years cycle However, the Moon's plane of orbit and the Earth's equatorial plane are (at least to very good approximation) independent of each other





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