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Why doesn't the moon fall down to Earth?

Asked by Avtoservis_gmei — Dec 13, 2025 — Science & Mathematics Resolved

If gravity pulls everything down, and the moon is being pulled by Earth's gravity, why doesn't the moon just fall down and crash into us? What keeps it up there? Is it the same reason satellites stay in orbit? How does something stay 'up' forever without any engine or fuel?

✓ Best Answer
admin — Score: 4

The honest answer is that scientists don't fully understand this yet. We have good models that make accurate predictions, but the 'why' underneath is still an active area of research. Anyone who tells you they have the complete answer is oversimplifying.

7 Answers

✓ Best Answer
admin — Dec 14, 2025

The honest answer is that scientists don't fully understand this yet. We have good models that make accurate predictions, but the 'why' underneath is still an active area of research. Anyone who tells you they have the complete answer is oversimplifying.

4
Dave Modem — Dec 13, 2025

I'm a physics grad student and this is one of my favorite questions to explain. The key insight is that our everyday intuition doesn't always apply at extreme scales — very small (quantum), very large (cosmological), or very fast (relativistic).

3
Charlie Reeves — Dec 15, 2025

Don't feel bad for not getting this right away. Some of the smartest people in history spent their whole lives on questions like this. The fact that you're curious enough to ask puts you ahead of most people. Keep asking why.

3
Avtoservis_inei — Dec 15, 2025

Carl Sagan's 'Cosmos' explains stuff like this better than any textbook. If you can find the old TV series or the book, watch or read it. He had a gift for making the universe make sense without dumbing it down. Highly recommend.

3
Avtoservis_hnei — Dec 15, 2025

I teach high school science and I get this question every year. The textbook explanation is a simplification — a useful one, but a simplification. The real answer involves stuff you'd cover in a college course, but I can give you the gist.

2
Alice Hartwell — Dec 14, 2025

Scientists love this kind of question because it's how real discoveries start. 'That's funny...' is supposedly how a lot of breakthroughs begin. Keep that curiosity — it's worth more than memorizing facts for a test.

1
Bob Nakamura — Dec 15, 2025

Be careful about 'common sense' here — a lot of science is counterintuitive. The whole point of doing experiments is that the universe often doesn't work the way our gut tells us it should. The Earth feels flat and stationary, after all.

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