Yes. An elephant has a greater mass than a mouse and therefore experiences more gravitational force.
More mass --> more gravitational force Greater distance --> less gravitational force
The more massive the objects, the greater the gravitational force between them. The gravitational force is affected by mass and distance. The closer two bodies are, the greater the gravitational force also.
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The greater the mass the more gravitational force an object has, the greater distance, say from the ground the greater potential energy, the greater gravitational force. hope that helps :]
-- The size (strength, magnitude) of gravitational force can be anything more than zero. -- The direction of gravitational force is always in both directions between the centers of two masses, attracting them toward each other. -- The distance of gravitational force can be anything more than zero. There is no limit, and the force between two masses is never zero, no matter how far apart they are.
An elephant has more skin than a mouse. The elephant is much larger in size, in proportion to a mouse.
On both it has the same amount of gravity but it has a different amount of force. The elephant might weighmore than the cat but they both have the exact same amount of gravity, or as others say it, acceleration. So the answer would be that it pull down on both of them with an equal amount of force.
An elephant has more skin.
More mass --> more gravitational force Greater distance --> less gravitational force
Gravitational force decreases as the square of the distance.
The more massive the objects, the greater the gravitational force between them. The gravitational force is affected by mass and distance. The closer two bodies are, the greater the gravitational force also.
More mass will cause more gravitational force.
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.
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The gravitational force on Mars (per unit mass) is less than the corresponding gravitational force on Earth. The strength of this so-called "gravitational field" depends on a planet's mass and its diameter: more mass --> more force; greater diameter (at the same mass) --> less force. You might also say that it depends on the planet's average density and its diameter. In this case, more density --> more force; greater diameter (at the same density) --> MORE force.
The greater the mass the more gravitational force an object has, the greater distance, say from the ground the greater potential energy, the greater gravitational force. hope that helps :]
Yes, they have gravity. In fact, anything that has mass will have a gravitational force - the more mass a body has, the more gravitational force it will exert.