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How does the moon cause ocean tide? What is the name of the coldest planet and green planet? and other some important questions and its answer

 How does the moon cause ocean tide?



The moon's gravitational pull generates something called the tidal force. The tidal force causes Earth—and its water—to bulge out on the side closest to the moon and the side farthest from the moon. These bulges of water are high tides.

When the Sun and Moon are in line with the Earth (when a full moon or new moon occurs), their combined gravity cause very high tides (and very low tides), known as “spring tides.” So the Moon affects the tides because of gravity, but gravity from the Sun and the spinning of the Earth also change how the tides behave.

The moon's gravitational pull on the Earth and the Earth's rotational force are the two main factors that cause high and low tides. The side of the Earth closest to the Moon experiences the Moon's pull the strongest, and this causes the seas to rise, creating high tides.

What is the name of the coldest planet and green planet?

The lowest temperature recorded in Uranus's Tropopause is 49 K (−224 °C; −371 °F), making Uranus the coldest planet in the Solar System.

 It appears greenish in color because of the large amount of methane gas present in its atmosphere.

What two plates created the Mariana Trench?

The Mariana Trench, in the South Pacific Ocean, is formed as the mighty Pacific plate subducts beneath the smaller, less-dense Philippine plate. In a subduction zone, some of the molten material—the former seafloor—can rise through volcanoes located near the trench.

Where does most magma form from?

Magma is primarily a very hot liquid, which is called a 'melt. ' It is formed from the melting of rocks in the earth's lithosphere, which is the outermost shell of the earth made of the earth's crust and upper part of the mantle, and the asthenosphere, which is the layer below the lithosphere.

What is the farthest star we can see with a telescope?

Nasa's Hubble Space Telescope has discovered the farthest individual star ever seen - an enormous blue stellar body nicknamed Icarus located over halfway across the universe. The star, harbored in a very distant spiral galaxy, is so far away that its light has taken nine billion years to reach Earth.

Who was the first person to see the red spot on Jupiter?

Jupiter's Great Red Spot was first observed in 1831 by amateur astronomer Samuel Heinrich Schwabe, so we know the storm has existed for at least 150 years. 

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