If we took material like rock from space and got it back to Earth enough times, would Earth grow as a planet?

https://sh.itjust.works/post/18544812

If we took material like rock from space and got it back to Earth enough times, would Earth grow as a planet? - sh.itjust.works

As the title says. I’m actually thinking about this hard with my friends because everything that’s produced on Earth stays on Earth so it doesn’t change size, but what if it’s not from Earth but it stays on Earth? [https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/4b10eeca-d3fc-4aca-beff-8d9cb61b303a.png]

I mean yeah. If you add stuff to a ball of stuff it get’s bigger.

Currently Earth is actually losing mass around 55.000 tones of mass per year. (100.000 tons loss due to air escaping to space but we gaing around 45.000 tons in dust and meteorties falling on earth).

If “energy equals mass”, shouldn’t we be gaining mass from the sun too 🤔

energy equals mass

That doesn’t mean energy has a weight.

It means it is physically possible to transition energy to mass and vice versa. Sunlight hitting the earth does not add any weight.

Also, earth radiates heat out to space. At a rate of (aaaaaaaaalmost, because of the greenhouse effect) 100% of the energy we get from the sun. If it didn’t, earth would be a few million degrees hot by now…

Energy don’t have weight but, it does have an effect on the curvature of space the same way matter does. In fact one of the proposed methods to create artificial blackholes is to put enough photons into the same place. It’s easier than getting matter together as photons don’t interact with eachother.

However the point is correct that light energy will only impart an insignificant amount to the earth’s pull.