Why Does Earth Rotate and What Role Does the Moon Play?

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Earth rotates due to the conservation of angular momentum from the material that formed it, which was already in motion. The Moon is tidally locked to Earth, meaning it rotates on its axis at the same rate it orbits Earth, resulting in only one side being visible from our planet. The initial rotation of Earth was established shortly after its formation, and some of this angular momentum has been transferred to the Moon. The reasons for the rotation of inner planets and the slow rotation of the Sun remain complex and less understood. Overall, the interplay of gravitational forces and momentum conservation plays a crucial role in planetary rotation and satellite behavior.
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Hi all,
I am not a physics student but I always used to think that Earth rotates because of an inertia that occurred after big bang. But then someone told me that it's wrong. Now, I don't know that why Earth rotates :(
 
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hi woundedtiger4! :smile:

the Earth rotates because (like all the other planets) it formed from the material that surrounded the sun, and that was rotating

i'll let someone else take up the story from there :smile: …​
 
If you take a cloud of particles in free fall moving in random directions, they will have a total linear momentum and a total angular momentum (relative to an observer).
As they coalesce, both will be conserved.
 
haruspex said:
If you take a cloud of particles in free fall moving in random directions, they will have a total linear momentum and a total angular momentum (relative to an observer).
As they coalesce, both will be conserved.

then why do we always see the same side of the moon?
 
Darken-Sol said:
then why do we always see the same side of the moon?
The Moon is tidally locked to the Earth. It rotates, but the period of rotation is the same as its orbital period around the Earth, so we only get to see one side.
 
tiny-tim said:
the Earth rotates because (like all the other planets) it formed from the material that surrounded the sun, and that was rotating
haruspex said:
If you take a cloud of particles in free fall moving in random directions, they will have a total linear momentum and a total angular momentum (relative to an observer).
As they coalesce, both will be conserved.

Simple, but simply wrong. Google the term "angular momentum problem." Why the planets rotate is not a simple matter of conservation of angular momentum.

A better explanation, at least for the gas giants, is that protoplanets orbit slightly faster than the gas and dust in the portions of the protoplanetary disk near those planets. The orbital rate of a planet is \sqrt{G(M_s+m_p)/r^3} while for a spec of dust it is just \sqrt{GM_s/r^3}. The protoplanet clears a path through the disk, and as it does so, it spirals in toward the nascent star. The planet encounters more material on its starward side as opposed to its outward side. This density gradient is what generates most of the planet's rotational angular momentum. It is not a simple matter of conservation of angular momentum.

Why the inner planets rotate is still problematic, and an even bigger problem is why the Sun is rotating so slowly.
The best answer to the OP's question is that the Earth is rotating now because (a) it was rotating shortly after it formed, and (b) it has only transferred some of that initial rotational angular momentum to the Moon's orbit.
 
turbo said:
The Moon is tidally locked to the Earth. It rotates, but the period of rotation is the same as its orbital period around the Earth, so we only get to see one side.

To elaborate, the Moon was not always tidally locked. This is a common phenom that happens with moons of planets over their lifetime (billions of years), as the planets works to slow its moons' rotation. Many planets in the solar system have tidally locked moons.
 
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