If its already moving.
Gravity
In theory, yes, it is possible to pick up something without friction if the object is in a zero-gravity environment or if the force applied is greater than the force of friction. However, in everyday situations on Earth, it is difficult to pick up something without some level of friction present.
No, a scale measures weight, which is the force of gravity pulling you toward the center of the Earth. Without gravity, there would be no weight to measure.
Gravity. It's the same force which pulls things down even without water.
gravity
Well, first let's look at what gravity is. If we consider "gravity" as gravitational force, then force=mass x acceleration, and mass x gravity does NOT equal acceleration. Acceleration is the change of velocity, so an object could accelerate without being affected by gravity, maybe just another force, like jet engines or something. Basically, no.
The force that holds the moon in place is gravity. Without gravity, there wouldn't be a moon.
The force you are thinking of of is gravity. Well not so much the gravity but the gravitons in the gravity witch give it the force it has. Without gravitons it is actually a very weak force.
Lift something against gravity and you're measuring its weight, which is the force acting on it due to gravity.
The force of gravity that attracts an object on Earth toward the Earth is the object's weight on Earth. The force of gravity that attracts the Earth toward an object on it is the Earth's weight on the object. Both forces are always there, and they're equal.
lol no gravity is not a force field since force fields kinda protects you from something, gravity is more like something with more mass attracting some other thing with less mass
Gravity