FearGod
Freedom Of Mind
The sun's gravity does.
Exactly.
The same thing with the gravity of the center of our galaxy, it controls the movements of the sun
as well as the other planets including earth.
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The sun's gravity does.
Exactly.
The same thing with the gravity of the center of our galaxy, it controls the movements of the sun
as well as the other planets including earth.
Yes. So the sun orbits the galactic Centre (the entire solar system does, in fact). What's that got to do with the sun orbiting the earth?
It implies that earth moves the same way as the sun does the same as Jupiter does ...etc,
all are controlled by the gravity of the center of our galaxy.
No. Gravity is (relatively speaking) a local phenomena. While the greatest source of gravity in the galaxy is the galactic core, its influence on the earth is negligible compared to the the gravitational affect of the Sun (millions of times stronger) That's why we orbit the sun as it orbits the galactic core.
How the galactic center controls the sun and not earth and not pluto?
Implying because it's negligible it's insignificant.
Further, I guess that's the same reason why teachers indoctrinate children.
Because I'm negligible?I'm convinced that you're a troll.
It does, just not as much as the sun does because gravity is a local phenomena.
It's like if you put two magnets and (one strong and one weaker) in a line a distance away from each other, and then put a piece of metal relatively close to the weaker magnet.
The piece of metal will attract to the weaker magnet (despite there being a stronger one) even though that same magnet is pulled toward the stronger magnet.
Because I'm negligible?
With this logic then Pluto should orbit Neptune and not the sun.
Because you're trying to back people into corners they can't get out of using intentional logical fallacies and (fair enough) actual debating skills. You're one of the better trolls I've seen, but a troll nonetheless.
No. Because Neptune doesn't generate nearly enough gravity.
Oh I give up. You may return to the 11th century from whence you came.
No. Because Neptune doesn't generate nearly enough gravity.
Oh I give up. You may return to the 11th century from whence you came.
Better for you to give up.
Average distance between Earth and Moon is less than 250,000 miles. The moon is inside the Earth's gravity well and therefore only slightly affected by the Sun. Together, however, they orbit inside the sun's gravity well.Just trying to let you think.
How the moon orbits earth while not Pluto orbiting Neptune?
Does the sun effect on the moon weaker than its effect on Pluto?
Better for you to give up.
Indeed. I'll never get through to you. You have no understanding of physics, and no desire to. Just a desire to be correct.
What was it Michel De Montaigne said again?
The moons of other planets also orbit those planets, because they are close to those planets--including the moons of Neptune. The distance between the planets (and Neptune and Dwarf Planet Pluto) are hundreds to millions of times further than the distance between the sun and the moons of those planets. All the planets orbit the sun; the moons/satellites orbit the planets, which orbit the sun. The sun, in turn, orbits with all the other stars in the galaxy around the center of the galaxy. Orbits within orbits within orbits.Lol, many are reading it but they're still not changed.
That's why i used it as my signature.
You said the sun's gravitational forces on Pluto overcome that of Neptune and
hence Pluto orbits the sun, but how your explanation works while the sun
can't control the earth's moon which rotates around earth and not the sun.