no.
Edit: It depends what you mean by noticeable, of course. Astronomers have very accurate ways of measuring orbits these days and the effect will be
measurable, I'm sure. But it probably isn't very important.
No, it does not have a noticeable influence...and you could at least TRY and make it sound like it didn't come off your homework xP
Yes
A black hole.
Every region of space exerts a pull on all the matter and light around it.
Gravity
No, it does not have a noticeable influence...and you could at least TRY and make it sound like it didn't come off your homework xP
Gravitational force exerts an attraction on objects.
A long range force is one which exerts a noticeable or large influence at considerable distance from the object which generates it. The best example is the force of gravity. The gravitational influence of the sun, for example, can be felt even a billion miles away from the sun. That is a pretty long range.
The object that exerts gravity is an object with mass.
Yes.
The moon exerts a gravitational influence on Earth. It causes the tides in the oceans, and, when directly overhead, it reduces your weight by a tiny amount.
Any two objects with mass will have a gravitational force. The orbit of planets around stars depends on the gravitational pull of the star. The Earth exerts a gravitational pull on its moon but the moon also exerts a pull on the Earth.
the earth of course.
The object with the most mass, as gravitational force is dependent on mass. Therefore the bowling ball exerts more gravitational force than a baseball or a football.
Anything that has mass exerts a gravitational field, so yes, earth exerts one.
the correct answer is 2.657342657x1033
Well.................. the gravitational force of earth exerts a force of 9.8m/s squared.