Have you ever wondered why stars fall at all if there’s no gravity in space? We have all seen astronauts swimming in the air on ISS like fish in the water. But if you think that it happens because there is zero gravity there, you’ll learn something new today. “Zero gravity” doesn’t mean there is none of it.
If there were no gravity in space the Earth wouldn’t be able to hold the Moon near itself. All the planets and stars would just fly across the Universe freely, bump into each other and – well, it would probably end things really quickly. Gravity can be tiny but never absent, this is one of its laws.
Other videos you might like:
The Bermuda Triangle Mystery Has Been Solved &;
What If You Dig a Tunnel Under the Ocean? &;
A Mysterious Object Punched a Hole in the Milky Way, Scientists Are Confused
TIMESTAMPS:
The Earth's gravity in the orbit 0:59
The ISS is falling to Earth all the time (Wait, what?!
If there were no gravity in space the Earth wouldn’t be able to hold the Moon near itself. All the planets and stars would just fly across the Universe freely, bump into each other and – well, it would probably end things really quickly. Gravity can be tiny but never absent, this is one of its laws.
Other videos you might like:
The Bermuda Triangle Mystery Has Been Solved &;
What If You Dig a Tunnel Under the Ocean? &;
A Mysterious Object Punched a Hole in the Milky Way, Scientists Are Confused
TIMESTAMPS:
The Earth's gravity in the orbit 0:59
The ISS is falling to Earth all the time (Wait, what?!
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