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if the revolution of the all the revolving ones stops ,the what happens to life

2006-12-29 00:09:25 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

5 answers

Well, revolution around the planted around it's axis, or around the sun?

If you're referring to the revolution around the axis is what you mean, people would experience a phenomenon which now only exists at the poles: 24 hours of light in the summer, and 24 hours of dark in the winter. The revolution of the earth on its axis is what creates night and day, so that would be completely eliminated. Of course, this would cause weather extremes in the summer and winter, because even in the summer, things cool down a lot at night. This wouldn't be the case anymore, so summers would be hotter than we experience now, and winters would be much colder. In fact, without direct sunlight for that long, the dark side of the planet would most likely adopt a climate much like our poles; completely frozen over. So half the world would freeze during the winter, then in the summer would be exposed to continual heat. What that could do to life on the planet is questionable, but it would certainly make it much more difficult. I don't know if humans would be able to survive, but I'm confident that there would still be life on the planet, even if only bacteria.

If the world stopped revolving around the sun, that would completely eliminate our seasons. The effect on the world would be different according to what season it happened to stop revolving at. If it was during spring or fall, I think the weather would be moderate enough throughout the world, though it would become much more temperate, but if we're stuck at winter or summer, that would entail some climate changes. It would be permanently winter or summer (depending on whatever hemisphere you're in), so you'd better adapt to such a climate. This can have a questionable effect on the poles as well, since it would be continually summer on at least one of them, causing it to melt; the other though, would experience winter continually though, so there'd be an increasing amount of freezing there. One ice cap would expand, and the other would decrease. This can also really throw off our climates and ecosystems, but I think it would be easier for us to survive in this case than if the earth were to stop revolving on its axis.

2006-12-29 01:18:09 · answer #1 · answered by nerd_at_heart 3 · 0 0

If the revolution of the earth were to stop (quite impossible), the earth's north and south hemispheres would be stuck in their seasons. If the earth's revolution stopped while it was winter in the northern hemisphere and summer in the southern hemisphere, the seasons would remain that way.

If, however, you accidentally said "revolution" but meant "rotation" (the spinning of the earth around its axis, rather than the movement of the earth around the sun) then you probably already have enough answers regarding that.

2006-12-29 11:25:43 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

to those who argue that gravity could end - that's faulty. Gravity is present in all rely - in spite of if this is spinning or not. in fact, we could adventure a upward thrust in weight (reasonable), through fact the 'upward' centrifugal tension replaced into bumped off. The Earth has in fact been slowing down for a protracted time - through end results of friction led to by using the shifting tides. Billions of years in the past, an afternoon was over 25 hours! If the Earth stopped unexpectedly, then the oceans could slop over continents, 1000kph winds could %. up, and the cat could flow interior the path of the wall at the same velocity. those effects does not happen, if of direction, the cessation of rotation occurred over a protracted quantity of time. as quickly as issues had calm down, each and every 'day' could final six months, through fact the Earth could nonetheless proceed its experience around the sunlight. massive winds could form, through fact the nice and cozy air from one area of the globe raced around to the chilly 'dark area', in the previous cooling and sinking, and racing back at floor point to the sunlight area. this could undoubtably carry approximately an extinction point experience. maximum, existence could perish, unquestionably the human race, in spite of the incontrovertible fact that it may be probable that some existence could proceed to exist interior the oceans, as those could attain an equilibrium usual temperature, in spite of the incontrovertible fact that ocean currents could be a lot greater ferocious.

2016-12-11 18:17:18 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I am not sure wat ud happen to life but these things will happen
for sure if life still exists
-No solar and Lunar Eclipses
-Distance between the planets are always going to be constant
-NASA will have to break its head and seek Bill gates to resume from the start as there would be no telecommunication and media unless the satellites are relaunched

Assumptions:

-Day and night timings of every country will change and it's going to be constant from as there would be no seasonal changes

-we may not be knowing wen to crack a beer for new year

wat else--oh no my head started a revolution--

Happy new year

2006-12-29 00:56:31 · answer #4 · answered by rahul 1 · 0 0

Most will die. The exception being those who live at the halfway point between light and dark.

2006-12-29 00:19:35 · answer #5 · answered by Beau R 7 · 0 0

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