menu
Qamnty
Login
Register
My account
Edit my Profile
Private messages
My favorites
Earth and the moon are gravitationally attracted to each other. does the more massive earth attract the moon with a greater force, the same force, or less force than the moon at…
Ask a Question
Questions
Unanswered
Tags
Ask a Question
Earth and the moon are gravitationally attracted to each other. does the more massive earth attract the moon with a greater force, the same force, or less force than the moon at…
asked
Jan 24, 2018
87.2k
views
2
votes
Earth and the moon are gravitationally attracted to each other. does the more massive earth attract the moon with a greater force, the same force, or less force than the moon attracts earth?
Geography
high-school
Enrico Carlesso
asked
by
Enrico Carlesso
9.4k
points
answer
comment
share this
share
0 Comments
Please
log in
or
register
to add a comment.
Please
log in
or
register
to answer this question.
1
Answer
6
votes
Same force is the one.
Amini
answered
Jan 31, 2018
by
Amini
8.3k
points
ask related question
comment
share this
0 Comments
Please
log in
or
register
to add a comment.
← Prev Question
Next Question →
Related questions
asked
Jun 11, 2020
31.4k
views
The Earth and the Moon gravitationally attract each other. Does the more massive Earth attract the Moon with a greater force, the same force, or less force than the Moon attracts the Earth? What reasoning
Jorge Valois
asked
Jun 11, 2020
by
Jorge Valois
7.6k
points
Physics
high-school
1
answer
2
votes
31.4k
views
asked
Jun 11, 2017
184k
views
Polaris, the North Star, is almost always visible in the same location because A) it is the brightest star in the sky. B) it is gravitationally attracted to our sun. C) it is the closest star to the earth,
Handicop
asked
Jun 11, 2017
by
Handicop
7.9k
points
Physics
middle-school
2
answers
5
votes
184k
views
asked
Apr 5, 2020
109k
views
The Earth and the Moon are gravitationally attracted to the Sun, but they don't crash into the Sun. A friend says that is because Earth and the Moon are beyond the Sun's main gravitational influence. Other
Anton Pelykh
asked
Apr 5, 2020
by
Anton Pelykh
8.5k
points
Social Studies
high-school
1
answer
3
votes
109k
views
Ask a Question
Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.
Categories
All categories
Mathematics
(3.7m)
History
(955k)
English
(903k)
Biology
(716k)
Chemistry
(440k)
Physics
(405k)
Social Studies
(564k)
Advanced Placement
(27.5k)
SAT
(19.1k)
Geography
(146k)
Health
(283k)
Arts
(107k)
Business
(468k)
Computers & Tech
(195k)
French
(33.9k)
German
(4.9k)
Spanish
(174k)
Medicine
(125k)
Law
(53.4k)
Engineering
(74.2k)
Other Questions
What are three ways water erodes the surface of earth
How have computers changed mapmaking in recent years
what is the outlet of a river called
Twitter
WhatsApp
Facebook
Reddit
LinkedIn
Email
Link Copied!
Copy
Search Qamnty