Question:

Does Global warming happen because of the movements of planets? ?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

Light bends around objects, like planets, so if like, venus or mercury got in a certain area, would that cause the light of the sun to pull away from the earth and creat cycles of warm and hot. (what most scientists agree happens to the earth)

 Tags:

   Report

5 ANSWERS


  1. no is because all the pollution from the cars, factories etc...


  2. Light doesn't bend much around the planets in our solar system.

    Although variations in Earth's orbit (which are caused by the gravitational influence of the other planets) are a major contributing factor in natural global warming.  Of course we can predict the Earth's orbit well enough to know when they occur and right now we're in a cooling cycle so the current global warming isn't due to the Earth's orbit (it's not the sun either).

    The Global warming we are experiencing now is from burning fossil fuels.

  3. Well, it's true that massive objects do cause curvature of space time and bends light that passes nearby.

    But it takes a VERY massive object to make even a very slight bend, and neither Mercury or Venus is sufficiently massive to cause a significant amount of bending light.

  4. If our planet (earth) get closer to the sun it will warn up. The further away from the sun the cooer we get eg: Like a campfire.

  5. no

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 5 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.