This is part of Carl Sagan's Cosmos. 3:05 onwards explains gravity.

Wow, I felt a brain-wrinkle form. It's like this feeling you get when you're on the verge of kinda understanding something, lol!
Questions:
1) So on a lesser scale, the Moon (revolving body) and earth (stationary) have the same relationship, but Earths got a smaller "pucker?"
2) Will these revolutions eventually get smaller and smaller until we hit the sun (hypothetically), or is the some force acting on the revolving body that prevents this?
Also, reading a book from Isaac Asimov called Understanding Physics, but I'm having trouble visualizing exactly how gravity works. Honestly, I'm feeling a little overwhelmed by this book. Does anyone have any suggestions that could help me out?
I think green energy like wind and wave energy is dangerous to the survival of all life on earth. If we managed to extract all wave and wind energy available to us, the eath stop spinning and we would all be squished by the relative increase in gravity. Pretty bad situtation if you ask me. You heard it here first.
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2) If you only have two bodies, then, no, the orbits around each other are stable and will last forever.
A black hole *really is* a point source of gravity; the gravity has gotten so high in so small a space that the structure of the matter cannot withstand being sucked closer and closer until all the mass is concentrated in a geometrical point in space - infinite density, a singularity.
lol.Just in case you are serious: All this stuff does, directly or indirectly, tap into Earth's rotational energy, and eventually Earth WILL stop and always face the same side to the sun.
The good news are:
1) This will take billions of years. Mankind will be long gone for other reasons by that time.
2) It will happen no matter what we do and it will not happen faster because we use some of the energy for our own purposes, it will just be lost otherwise.
Hans
No, actually when considering the Earth and the moon, the moon has the smaller pucker.
That is how I read it and didn't notice that the words weren't right.Sorry, i meant the earth's "pucker" is smaller than the sun's, not the moon's. Should've made myself more clear.
This thread is blowin my mind-grapes. This stuff is amazing and I really need to get into another intro to physics class. Hopefully I can get a good prof this time.