It is masses that cause gravity in the first place.
Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.
Gravity has no effect on mass, and mass has no effect on gravity. The characteristic behavior of gravity is that the force between two masses is directly proportional to the product of the masses, so if one or both masses were to increase, the mutual gravitational forces between them would increase in proportion to the increase in the product. That happens regardless of what the starting or ending mass happens to be, because mass has no effect on gravity.
effect of Gravity varies according to the masses of the two objects, and the distance between them
(1) The masses involved, (2) the distance between the masses.
No, not at all. The gravitational force depends only on the masses involved, and on the distance between the masses. Magnetism should be considered a separate force - and it has no effect on gravity.
Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.Gravity is related to masses. Inertia is simply another effect of masses. I would say that the mass is the source, both for gravity and for inertia. The basic unit, however, is the mass.
Gravity has no effect on mass, and mass has no effect on gravity. The characteristic behavior of gravity is that the force between two masses is directly proportional to the product of the masses, so if one or both masses were to increase, the mutual gravitational forces between them would increase in proportion to the increase in the product. That happens regardless of what the starting or ending mass happens to be, because mass has no effect on gravity.
effect of Gravity varies according to the masses of the two objects, and the distance between them
No effect. All masses experience the same acceleration due to gravity.
(1) The masses involved, (2) the distance between the masses.
The product of the masses of the attracting bodies, and the distance separating them.
No, not at all. The gravitational force depends only on the masses involved, and on the distance between the masses. Magnetism should be considered a separate force - and it has no effect on gravity.
Gravity is an effect of mass. Two masses will attract each other proportional to their masses and the force varies by the inverse square of the distance.
Gravity is only affected by masses, and by how far you are from those masses.
It doesn't. The force of gravity depends on the masses involved, and their distance. However, air resistance can introduce other forces, that counteract the force of gravity.
Bigger masses mean a bigger force of gravity. Bigger distances mean smaller forces. Mathematically, the force is directly proportional to the product of the masses, and inversely proportional to the square of the distance.
The variables of gravity are mass and radius- the distance from the center masses of the two masses considered for attraction.