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-   -   Moon, earth and sun (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=621051)

  • Dec 20, 2011, 04:15 AM
    farnoosh777
    Moon, earth and sun
    The gravity that sun has on the moon is about 2 times more than the gravity from earth so why doesn't moon run away from earth to sun?
    Please explain by equation!
  • Dec 20, 2011, 07:32 AM
    ebaines
    The moon is in orbit about both the earth and the sun. Its motion is in equilibrium with both the pull of gravity due to the sun and the pull due to the earth. Note that the moon's mean distance from the sun is the same as the mean distance of the earth to the sun and hence its orbital period about the sun is the same as the earth's (1 year). So it doesn't matter that the sun's gravity is greater on the moon than is the earth's - just as the fact that the moon's gravitational attraction on the earth is significantly less than the sun's.
  • Dec 20, 2011, 07:38 AM
    farnoosh777
    thanks, but can you explain it by equation?? Or give me a link??
  • Dec 20, 2011, 08:29 AM
    ebaines
    The ratio of the gravitational attraction between sun and moon versus earth and moon is:



    where:
    = mass of the sun
    = mass of the earth
    = distance from sun to moon
    = distance from earth to moon


    Hence the ratio of for the two orbits should also be 2.2:

    = 1/365.25 days, = 1/27.3 days, and the ratio is:



    So it's all consistent.

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