it is inversly proportional to the squar of distance between them.....(1/r2)
and is directly proportional to the product of their masses.....(m1*m2)
where m1 is the mass of 1st object ...
and m2 is the mass of second object....
Because gravity is the force of attraction between two objects, and the strength of the force depends on the distance between them. If the Earth is one of the objects and the other one leaves the Earth, then the force of gravity it feels is certainly going to change.
I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.
The close objects are the more gravity there will be between them.
The mass of the two objects and the distance between them control the force of gravity between them. The equation for the force of gravity between two objects is Fg=(GMm)/R2, so if two objects are very massive, the force will be greater, and if two objects are very close the force will be greater. The force of gravity is directly related to the mass of the objects and inversely related to the distance between them.the earth
The measure of the force of attraction between objects due to gravity is WEIGHT. ^_^
The Gravity would Double.
More mass = more force of gravity.
Gravity exerts a force on objects; forces change the motion of objects.
Increase the masses.
The masses of the objects and the distance between them determines the force of gravity between them. The more massive and closer together they are, the greater the force of gravity.
The force of gravity acts between all objects. If massincreases, the force of gravity increases. If distanceincreases, the force of gravity decreases.
Two things reduce the force of gravity between two objects: an increase in the distance between the two objects or decrease in mass of the two objects