The objects around you and me are affected by the mass of earth by gravity
no. weight is affected
Earth attracts objects because we have gravitational field, which draws objects in.
Tidal forces on earth
The distance from the center of mass to Earth, times the mass of the Earth, must be equal to the distance of the center of mass to the Moon, times the mass of the Moon. (For more than 2 objects, the calculation is somewhat more complicated - reading about "center of mass" can give you an idea.)The distance from the center of mass to Earth, times the mass of the Earth, must be equal to the distance of the center of mass to the Moon, times the mass of the Moon. (For more than 2 objects, the calculation is somewhat more complicated - reading about "center of mass" can give you an idea.)The distance from the center of mass to Earth, times the mass of the Earth, must be equal to the distance of the center of mass to the Moon, times the mass of the Moon. (For more than 2 objects, the calculation is somewhat more complicated - reading about "center of mass" can give you an idea.)The distance from the center of mass to Earth, times the mass of the Earth, must be equal to the distance of the center of mass to the Moon, times the mass of the Moon. (For more than 2 objects, the calculation is somewhat more complicated - reading about "center of mass" can give you an idea.)
No. Newtons are a measurement of mass and are relative only to Earth's gravity and are not affected by changes in gravity. Only weight is affected by changing gravity. On Earth, weight and mass are the same because Earth's gravity is the benchmark constant for measuring mass in Newtons, and weight is affected by that very same factor (Earth's gravity). On other planets, mass is unchanged because the Earthly gravity is a constant (and therefore, unchanged), and the weight changes because now it is affected by a new planetary gravity.
Everything around us is affected by the mass of earth because mass makes a force called gravity and that's what keeps us from floating off Earth and that's how the objects are affected, they are held onto Earth by gravity!
The earth's mass and it's gravitational pull are stronger than the moon so that causes to pull the object down to the earth's center, therefore the gravity exerted by other objects are from the earth's mass.
the mass of the earth exerts gravity on all objects around it
earth's gravitational force pulls anything toward the center of the earth. so that makes everything stay in place. While a dropped object falls to earth rather than moving together or towards you.
Yes. The mass is basically independent of any attracting objects, such as Earth.
Nothing. An object's mass refers to how many atoms are present so unless you start chopping bits from it there will be no change in mass. An object's weight is its gravitational pull towards the Earth. Its weight could be affected by its position on the Earth because the Earth is not a perfect sphere. Objects have a higher mass at the poles than the equator as at the poles the objects are closer to the centre (center) of the Earth.
No. But the weight of that mass depends on the local gravity.
no. weight is affected
Earth attracts objects because we have gravitational field, which draws objects in.
Weight is affected by gravity, while mass does not. On Earth mass and weight are the same, yet on the moon your weight could be 1/6 of its original, while your mass would stay the same no matter where you go.
No, they continue having mass.
More mass = more gravitational attraction.