What Determines Earth's Yearly Cycle?

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In summary, Earth's tilt is a result of its interactions with the solar system. Over time, it precesses, or wobbles, around its original orbital direction.
  • #1
biophysics
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1) the Earth moves around the sun. What is the force causing this movement around the sun? I know that there is a gravitational force pulling it inward, but what force keeps it from falling toward the sun?

2) The Earth is constantly spinning. This causes the day/night that we see. What is the force causing this revolution?

3) The Earth tilts on its axis about 23 degrees. This causes the seasons. What is the force causing this tilt?

4) Why does it take 365 days for the tilt in question 3 to complete 1 period

Please tell which question you are answering. thanks
 
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  • #2
biophysics said:
1) the Earth moves around the sun. What is the force causing this movement around the sun? I know that there is a gravitational force pulling it inward, but what force keeps it from falling toward the sun?
The Earth is falling toward the sun - it just always misses! That's what an orbit is.

Another way to describe an orbit is that the tangential velocity is high enough that the Earth accelerates toward the sun without ever getting closer to it.

Or, if you prefer, an orbit is what happens when the acceleration due to gravity is balanced by the "ficticious" centrifugal force.
2) The Earth is constantly spinning. This causes the day/night that we see. What is the force causing this revolution?
By Newton's first law and/or conservation of energy, a force is not required to keep a moving object moving.
3) The Earth tilts on its axis about 23 degrees. This causes the seasons. What is the force causing this tilt?
Again, no force.

Force causes acceleration. If there is no acceleration, there is no need for a force.
4) Why does it take 365 days for the tilt in question 3 to complete 1 period
The tilt does not precess in 365 days - it takes thousands of years. What happens in 365 days is that the Earth orbits the sun. Draw yourself a diagram if you can't see why the seasons happen with a fixed tilt.
 
  • #3
thanks for your response:

For the orbit around the sun
1) The Earth has a tangential velocity which is constant. Since there is no acceleration, no force is needed to maintain this tangential velocity. However what brought the Earth to this tangential velocity? Also is the tangential velocity decreasing as the Earth does not travel in a vaccum(stuff runs into the earth)?

2) What caused the rotational velocity of the Earth (the one that causes night/day) to begin?

3) Thanks for explaining the tilt concept. Is it known what causes this tilt, or it's movement over thousands of years

thanks
 
  • #4
#1. The stuff Earth runs into is insignificant compared to Earth's mass. Even if it weren't, it can hit Earth from the front or the rear, or above, or below, resulting in no significant bias.

#1 & 2. These are open to debate. The formation of the solar system is not completely understood. Earth's tangental velocity is the perfect speed for a (or an almost) circular orbit. How Earth's orbit circularized is open for debate. Perhaps it formed in a circular orbit, or perhaps it originally had a good deal of eccentricity and its orbit circularized later due to its interactions with solar system debris, or to a lesser degree, with the tides it pulls on the Sun (which is probably easily-computable, allowing it to be ruled out).

#2. If Earth had no rotational velocity, that would more-require an explanation than Earth having rotational velocity. During formation, Earth was getting bashed left and right, up and down, by objects ranging in size from microscopic to objects rivaling Earth's mass. It would be a weird lottery-style chance if after all that, Earth's spin ended up perfectly stationary. The bias, as demonstated by most other planets in the solar system, is a counter-clockwise (as viewed from above), prograde (same as its orbital direction) rotation. This was probably imparted by the momentum of the stuff that bashed together to form the Earth.

#3. Again, a tile of 0.0000 degrees would more-require the explanation. Because Earth is not perfectly spherical, this gives a handle for other solar systems to tourque it around over long time scales, so the tilt precesses.
 
  • #6
The main reason things in the Solar System move as they do is as a result of the formation of the system itself.

Please see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_nebula#Formation_of_planets

or refer to any decent introductory astronomy textbook.

Please note, as mentioned above, once this was all set into motion no forces are required to keep it going.
 

1. What is the Earth's yearly cycle?

The Earth's yearly cycle, also known as the Earth's orbit, is the path that the Earth takes around the Sun in one year. It is an elliptical orbit, meaning that the Earth is not always the same distance from the Sun throughout the year.

2. What determines the length of the Earth's yearly cycle?

The length of the Earth's yearly cycle is determined by the Earth's distance from the Sun and its orbital speed. The Earth's orbit is slightly elliptical, so its distance from the Sun varies throughout the year. This, combined with the Earth's orbital speed, determines the length of the year.

3. What causes the Earth's yearly cycle?

The Earth's yearly cycle is caused by the gravitational pull of the Sun. The Sun's gravitational force keeps the Earth in its elliptical orbit, and the Earth's rotation on its axis keeps it moving in its orbit around the Sun.

4. How long is the Earth's yearly cycle?

The Earth's yearly cycle, or orbit, takes approximately 365.24 days to complete. This is why we have a leap year every four years to account for the extra 0.24 days, making the year 366 days long.

5. How does the Earth's yearly cycle impact our seasons?

The Earth's yearly cycle has a direct impact on our seasons. As the Earth orbits around the Sun, its axis is tilted at a 23.5-degree angle. This tilt causes different parts of the Earth to be closer to or further from the Sun at different times of the year, resulting in the changing of seasons.

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