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No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.
Gravity doesn't change, no matter where you are. One of the characteristics of the forces due to gravity is that they're inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the two masses involved. So as your distance from a planet changes, the mutual forces attracting you and the planet toward each other change in inverse proportion to the square of the distance between you and the center of the planet.
The force of gravity pulls it back down to Earth.
The force of gravity that attracts an object on Earth toward the Earth is the object's weight on Earth. The force of gravity that attracts the Earth toward an object on it is the Earth's weight on the object. Both forces are always there, and they're equal.
Gravity always acts as a pair of forces, not as one single force. The strength of the forces depends on both masses, not just one of them. The forces of gravity attract the diver toward the earth and the earth toward the diver. The forces are equal in both directions. If the diver weighs 150 pounds on earth, then the earth weighs 150 pounds on the diver. The diver accelerates toward the center of the earth with an acceleration equal to (weight)/(diver's mass), and the earth accelerates toward the diver with an acceleration equal to (weight)/(earth's mass). Has that helped, or just confused the issue further ?
The force that pushes downward on objects on earth is called gravity.
No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.No. Those are two quite different forces. The Earth's gravity is caused by the amount of mass Earth has.
Yes. the mutually attracting forces of gravity hold the moon and earth together and cause the earth's tidal forces.
Gravity doesn't change, no matter where you are. One of the characteristics of the forces due to gravity is that they're inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the two masses involved. So as your distance from a planet changes, the mutual forces attracting you and the planet toward each other change in inverse proportion to the square of the distance between you and the center of the planet.
Earth is hafly big, so it has gravity. Larger, it has more gravity. Smaller, it has less gravity.
No. Gravity always behaves according to the same formula, introduced by Newton.But the gravitational forces between you and the Earth certainly change when thedistance between you and the Earth's center changes significantly.
Mars has a weaker gravity than earth because it is a smaller planet and is smaller than
Mars has approximately one third the surface gravity of the earth
Much smaller.
Gravity on Mars is substantially lower than on Earth.
gravity and inertia
Being smaller, the Moon's gravity is less than that of Earth.