Yes, It has a strong gravitational pull. Without the gravitational pull, none of the planets would orbit it.
The sun because it has more mass. The greater the mass, the greater the gravitational pull.
Saturn
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well look in the damn dicktionary!
The moon is closer. Gravitational pull decreases as the fourth power of the distance so even though the Sun is greatly more massive than the Moon, it distance is 400 times the distance to the Moon and it is not massive enough to exert as large a gravitational pull.
On Earth it's the moon.
All the planets outside Earth experience a weaker gravity pull from the Sun. Neptune at a distance of 30 astronomical units is 30 times further from the Sun, and gravity from the Sun is 1/900 as strong.
the density of the object that gravity is working upon determines it.
because of the gravitional pull of the universe..and the alignment of the asteroids...
They are both affected by the moons gravitional pull, but from different extremes.
The moons gravitational attraction is weaker as the moon is smaller
False. The sun does exert a gravitational force on the moon.