Gravity and electromagnetic forces differ in that gravitational force is the result of mass interaction and electromagnetic forces are the result of charge interaction.
There are only two forces that act at a distance:gravity, andelectromagnetism.Magnetic fields are sometimes referred to as a third force, however magnetism and electrostatic forces are both examples the electromagnetic force.
There are many types of forces: friction, spring, gravity, buoyancy, tension, drag, applied, upthrust and elastic.
I only heard of 4: Gravity, electro- magnetism, nuclear weak and nuclear strong.
The Four Fundamental Forces are: * Gravity * Electromagnetism * Strong Nuclear Force (holds nucleus together) * Weak Nuclear Force (neutrino interactions induce beta decay) Most common forces like friction and drag and just objects pushing other objects are electromagnetic forces.
No. Such conflict was basically part of the Cold War between NATO forces on one side, and Chinese and Soviet forces on the other.
gravity, no jk
No. Grams is mass. Gravity is the phenomenon that causes forces of attraction between two masses.
The forces between two masses that arise as the result of gravity are always vectors.
Gravity.
Gravity and buoyancyWhat two forces are balanced when a system is in isostasy?Downward gravity and upward buoyancy
-- the mass of either one of them-- the distance between their centers of mass.Note that nothing else can change the forces of gravity between them.
Interparticle forces refer to the attractive or repulsive interactions between particles (atoms, molecules, ions) in a substance. These forces play a significant role in determining the physical properties of a material, such as its melting point, boiling point, and viscosity. Examples of interparticle forces include hydrogen bonding, van der Waals forces, and electrostatic interactions.
If the distance between the objects increases, the force of gravity will decrease.
The only force of any significance is gravity.
More mass = more force of gravity.
That is gravity. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravity
gravity