They hold together with the help of different forces than gravity. Therefore they are not influenced by gravity.
Gravity can depend on how far apart and how heavy the objects are.
Not as far as i know.
true
The question is unclear but it should be noted that as far as we understand physics, there is no region of the universe with zero gravity. There are regions where mass is so spaced out that the gravity is effectively zero for nearly all purposes, but it is still not zero.
no because the atoms are to far apart
do you mean where is zero gravity? if so it is all in space and sometimes at science places such as a lab where scientist study zero gravity. to me that stuff is awesome you can float in the air and stuff its awesome.
Forces between electron pairs push the atoms apart.
its gravity because it depends on how close of far apart gravity is between the object
because the atoms are so far apart from each other.
Remembering that there was no year zero, it is 429 years.
it depends how far away you are from earth but is still never 0. gravity can be calculated by 32 feet per second squared.
he is maybe dead or he is training far apart from his friends, town,family.