The gravitational attraction between two masses depends on the product of their individual masses (direct proportion), and also on the distance between their centers (inverse square proportion).
Anything with mass has gravity so anything with no mass has no gravity, for example a photon has no mass.
Mass is not affected by gravity. Weight is the result of the force of gravity acting on mass.
No. Mass is independent of gravity, but weight is a function of gravity and mass.
The mass is basically NOT affected by gravity. The weight IS affected, and it is equal to mass x gravity.
Gravity
Gravity acts on all objects with mass, so no. All elements are influenced by gravity.
Anything with mass has gravity so anything with no mass has no gravity, for example a photon has no mass.
No.
The larger the mass of an object, the greater the force it will exert on other objects. But as the distance from that object becomes greater, the gravitational pull becomes smaller. For example, the sun has a larger mass than the earth, so gravity on the suns surface would be much greater than on earths surface. Also, as you get further and further away from the earth, the less you are influenced by its gravity.
well weight depends on mass and gravity so gravity depends on mass. e.g weight=mass X gravity
Mass is not affected by gravity. Weight is the result of the force of gravity acting on mass.
gravity and how mass is effected by it
Gravity is a force but has no mass.
No. Mass is independent of gravity, but weight is a function of gravity and mass.
You're on to it! Gravity appears to be a property of mass. No mass - no gravity. But exactly what gravity is we don't yet know.
The mass is basically NOT affected by gravity. The weight IS affected, and it is equal to mass x gravity.
Weight = mass * gravity