It can affect people's weight and mass. Also if youdo skydiving, then gravity will pull you down much faster, but air resistance is much weaker.
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Another contributor stopped in to clean up after the first one:
-- Gravity is responsible for your weight, but has nothing to do with your mass.
-- You don't have to be a skydiver for gravity to pull you down. You only have to
slip on a banana peel, fall out of bed, or walk down the stairs.
-- Air resistance isn't all that weak. Gravity wants to keep increasing your falling speed,
but air resistance can completely take over so that your falling speed doesn't change
at all.
No, it does not affect things that are not solid or things that can hold volume. Such as gas. etc
Inertia does not affect gravity, these are two entirely separate things, even though they both are produced by the same thing, which is mass. Mass creates both inertia and gravity, but inertia and gravity do not affect each other.
The mass of the two bodies (gravity is always between 2 things) and the distance between them.
Gravity is a function of mass and distance. So, no air pressure does not affect gravity.
Gravity exists, as all masses attract. the larger the mass the more attraction so its the mass of each object.
No, it does not affect things that are not solid or things that can hold volume. Such as gas. etc
Inertia does not affect gravity, these are two entirely separate things, even though they both are produced by the same thing, which is mass. Mass creates both inertia and gravity, but inertia and gravity do not affect each other.
it keeps you from going into space
gravity and mass
because the force of gravity on earth very strong and earth dragged all things from space
The mass of the two bodies (gravity is always between 2 things) and the distance between them.
yeah---not as much as on land but still
the pull of the moon's gravity on the ocean.
It pulls each of them down, toward the center of the Earth.
Gravity is the only real force at work here, The mass affects the gravity, but the gravity is the only one that could be termed a "force".
Gravity, temperature, light, friction etc...
Yes. It makes things fall. Answer2: Gravity establishes the orbiting velocity, v2 = GM/r.