The simple answer is no.
There may be a Dark Force (that's its name) which acts like repulsive gravity' but no human has ever directly detected it. (It was postulated from calculation of the rate of expansion of the universe.)
The question of what if gravity was repulsive in nature is finally solved you can check it out on
All mass has the same sign, while electric charge can be either positive or negative.
no
gravitational pull/force
gravitational force is a basic force of nature, it presents everywhere and at all time. The gravitational force acts between any 2 masses in the universe and pulls them toward each other .It is the force that pulls objects toward earth.
It's a force, so newtons, N.
The gravitational force is only attractive. Electric and magnetic forces can be both attractive and repulsive.
Gravitational force exists between masses. Gravitational force is only of attractive. No repulsive gravitational force has been found so far. But in electrostatics and magnetism, the force between electric charges and magnetic poles respectively are of both repulsive and attractive. Nuclear force between the nucleons within the nucleus of the atom is also attractive in nature.
-- Electrical force only cares about the charge on two objects, and ignores their mass. Gravitational force only cares about the mass of two objects, and ignores their charge. -- Electrical force can be attractive or repulsive. Gravitational force can only be attractive.
In case of electric force there are both repulsive and attractive. But in case of gravitational force, only attractive force. Electrical force between electric charges. Gravitational force between masses. In electric force we use a constant known as permittivity of the medium. But in gravitational force a universal constant known as Gravitational constant is used. Electrical force is very much greater than gravitational force.
In the same direction, attractive not repulsive, and many tens of orders of magnitude smaller.
All mass has the same sign, while electric charge can be either positive or negative.
There's no reason to suspect that there is such a thing as antigravity. As far as we know, all mass has the same "gravitational charge" (mass), and the force is always an attractive force, never a repulsive force. So, sorry, there's no such thing as antigravity.
Serving, or able, to repulse; repellent; as, a repulsive force., Cold; forbidding; offensive; as, repulsive manners.
There's no reason to suspect that there is such a thing as antigravity. As far as we know, all mass has the same "gravitational charge" (mass), and the force is always an attractive force, never a repulsive force. So, sorry, there's no such thing as antigravity.
Gravitational force of the moon is 1/6th the gravitational force of the Earth. The larger the object, the greater gravitational force it will have.
The electrostatic force is attractive between unlike charges, and repulsive between like charges.
The gravitational force is proportional to the product of the two masses involved. The product is always positive, since mass is always positive. The electrical force is proportional to the product of the two charges involved. The product can be positive or negative, since either charge can be positive or negative.