The mass generally affects the magnitude of the magnitude force. The greater the mass, the greater the gravitational force or pull.
The magnitude of gravitational force between two objects is directly proportional to the product of their masses. This means that as the mass of one or both objects increases, the magnitude of the gravitational force between them also increases. In simpler terms, the more massive an object is, the stronger its gravitational pull.
The larger the mass, the stronger the gravitational force.
The larger the mass, the stronger the gravitational force.
As you increase the mass the magnitude of the gravitational force will increase as well.
The greater the mass, the greater the gravitational force.
The mass of the objects and the distance between them.
Gravitational Force = Gravitational Constant x mass of the first object x mass of the second object / distance squared. So what affects the magnitude is the masses of the objects and the distance between them. Gravitational Constant = 6.672 x 10^-11 N x m^2/kg^2 Both masses, and the distance between them.
There is no minimum mass at which point an object (celestial or otherwise) begins to have a gravitational force. Any object with mass has an associated gravitational force. The magnitude of that force is proportional to to the mass of the object - lots of mass results in lots of gravitational force; little masses result in only little gravitational force.
You are measuring the magnitude of the gravitational force that attracts your mass towards the center of the Earth, and the magnitude of the gravitational force that attracts the Earth towards you.
Gravitational Force = Gravitational Constant x mass of the first object x mass of the second object / distance squared. So what affects the magnitude is the masses of the objects and the distance between them. Gravitational Constant = 6.672 x 10^-11 N x m^2/kg^2 Both masses, and the distance between them.
The two things that affect the gravitational force is Mass and Distance.
Gravitational force is experienced by each and every object in this universe.and the magnitude of this gravitational force is proportional to the mass of the object.Hence objects which possess greater mass experience greater gravitational force.the reason of existence of our solar system is the gravitational force experienced by the planets.
Multiply your mass (in kilograms) by 9.8. That will give you your weight in newton. The weight is, precisely, the gravitational force.