The ocean stays in place because it’s held down by Earth, just like a big, wet blanket is held on a bed.
Imagine you have a huge bowl filled with water, that's kind of like the ocean. Now, if you put your hand over the bowl and hold it down, the water doesn’t fall out, right? That’s because your hand is pressing against the bowl, keeping everything in place. Earth works like your hand, it holds the ocean up so it doesn’t float away into space.
Why It Doesn't Float Away
The Earth has a lot of gravity, which is like an invisible hand that pulls things toward the center of the planet. The ocean is made of water, and gravity pulls all that water down, keeping it on Earth instead of letting it drift off into the universe.
Think about when you fill your bathtub with water, if there were no walls or a plug, the water would just spill out everywhere. But the Earth’s gravity acts like a giant plug, holding everything in place so we can splash and swim happily without worrying about floating away!
Examples
- A child tries to pour the ocean into a bucket.
- Imagine Earth is like a giant magnet holding the water in place.
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See also
- What Makes the Ocean So Salty?
- How Does the Moon Affect the Oceans?
- What does the ocean act like a giant weight on Earth?
- How the tides REALLY work?
- How Did the Ocean Become Salty?