No. The rotation of an object in space has nothing to do with mass, and therefore gravity. Uranus is far larger than Earth, and yet has a day that lasts just 17 hours. However, gravity may have felt less strong due to the close proximity of the moon at the time.
@attractivue12 жыл бұрын
Actually I think I didn't ask my question right, I meant to ask if we had stronger gravity when Earth was spinning faster? Isn't this how we propose to achieve artificial gravity in space ships by spinning it faster around the core?
@dbogdanovic198714 жыл бұрын
the first and the second part are the same. the third one is missing...
@attractivue13 жыл бұрын
When Earth was spinning faster than today then does it mean we had low gravity back in those days?
@superfisto17 жыл бұрын
Yay moon!
@amtek66614 жыл бұрын
Lets all do the math. Distance from earth to moon -384000km. Moon moving away at 4cm year (get your calculators kids) 1km=100000cm 100000cm divided by 4cm = 25000cm Which puts an earth moon collision at 3.84 Billion years ago. See easy............
@aol197915 жыл бұрын
this is not "dis-information". Especially not the way you're categorizing it. If history were to be recorded back then then there would be no need for this "dis-information". These theories are as close as we can get to fact without actually being there. Like on a significantly smaller scale when an investigator pieces together a mystery simply by the clues at the scene without ever being there for the incident.