No. The moon's gravity would be competing for the same matter that exists under the same conditions. The only difference is that the Earth's gravity would be weaker since it is further away from its surface and the moon's gravity would be stronger because it's closer to the Moon. This battle between the Earth and the moon's gravity is occurring while the near perfect vacuum of space is also present at the edge of the atmosphere.
This is jewish bullshit if I ever saw it. This completely destroys the heliocentric claim that gravity can prevent gases from expanding into a vacuum. The second law of thermodynamics wins and heliocentrism loses.
McNasty -7 points 2 months ago
No. The moon's gravity would be competing for the same matter that exists under the same conditions. The only difference is that the Earth's gravity would be weaker since it is further away from its surface and the moon's gravity would be stronger because it's closer to the Moon. This battle between the Earth and the moon's gravity is occurring while the near perfect vacuum of space is also present at the edge of the atmosphere.
This is jewish bullshit if I ever saw it. This completely destroys the heliocentric claim that gravity can prevent gases from expanding into a vacuum. The second law of thermodynamics wins and heliocentrism loses.