Basically to infinity, but the force exerted decreases to the square of the distance, so the greater the distance the less the force being exerted. something twice as far away will feel four times less force. And this will technically never equal zero.
How far a baseball goes according to physics depends on how hard you through it. If you go of the Earth, things like drag and gravity affect this.
The wind travel by gravity.
Propane can travel uphill without any issues, as it is a gas and not affected by gravity like liquid fuels. The distance is not limited by the incline of the hill, but rather by the capacity and pressure of the propane tank or system being used.
"Too far to travel for you"
Absolutely; the gravitational field of the planet Earth extends to the shuttle and much farther; the moon is held in its orbit by the Earth's gravity, and the shuttle doesn't travel nearly as far as the moon.
Gravity can depend on how far apart and how heavy the objects are.
Gravity waves travel as small distortions in space and time.
Do eels travel Far
Gravity wave do, so yes.
As far as it is pushed or jumps is how far a slug falls. The land-based, shell-less gastropod mollusc in question will have no way of stopping itself from free-falling -- for whatever reason or from no matter what height -- once gravity kicks in.
Far, far stronger at 274.0m/s2earth gravity is 9.78m/s2
As far as light can travel