sinisha said:
can someone explain to me in simple language
why does not Moon fall on the Earth?
I don't understand it why?
please don't give me wikipedia link
or something like this
http://www.teachersdomain.org/resources/ess05/sci/ess/eiu/moonorbit/index.html
wich I find wery funny
thanks
Remember the Earth is round. Picture your are hovering in a spaceship (rockets blasting down so you don't fall) at the same distance the moon is from the earth.
Drop a rock out your window and it will fall straight down hitting the Earth right below you.
Throw it out and it will arc down landing somewhere ahead of you.
Throw it harder and it will land farther away.
Throw it hard enough and it will miss the Earth entirely and circle around hitting the back of your spaceship. (It follows an elliptical orbit reaching its closest point opposite the Earth from you).
Throw it even harder and it will actually follow a circular orbit.
Throw it harder still and it will orbit in a bigger ellipse with your position as its closest point.
Throw it even harder still (above the escape velocity at that height) and it will follow a hyperbolic trajectory never to return.
The moon is following an almost circular trajectory around the Earth. The reason it is nearly a circle is that tidal interactions with the Earth and sun tend to decrease the eccentricity of its orbit. This is more complex than can be "simply explained" especially if you are just trying to grasp the simple idea of an orbit.
What may confuse you is your perception of orders of magnitude. Relative to its size the moon appears to be moving quite slowly taking a month to circle the Earth. But figure the distance it travels in that month and work out the speed and you will see it is moving very very fast relative to planes, trains, and automobiles, (and bullets). Specifically it is moving at about 2165 mph.
So by the time the moon has enough time to fall toward the Earth at this same speed it has "moved over to the side" and is still moving tangentially around the Earth in its orbit.