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Weight describes earth's gravity.As objects get closer to Earth, the pull of Earth's gravity increase
gravity
No. The international date line is a zig-zag line between the earth's poles. It has no particular connection to the forces of gravity. Gravity behaves exactly the same way at every point on earth. Wherever an object may be, there are equal forces attracting it and the earth toward each other. The forces are proportional to the product of the object's mass and the earth's mass, and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between their centers. Since the earth's diameter at the equator is slightly larger than its diameter through the poles, objects at the poles are slightly closer to the center of the earth, so the mutual gravitational forces are slightly larger there.
The forces that affect the rate of a falling object are Gravity and Air Resistance. Gravity affects the speed and the velocity of the object by speeding it up as it falls closer to the earth, and Air resistance works against the object pushing against it.
The only way to do that is to physically take it away from the Earth. As long as the object remains on the Earth, you can apply additional forces to it, to combine in various ways with the force of gravity and make the object move as you want it to, but there's nothing you can do to change the force of gravity on it.
no =)
the grvitational pull of the earth becomes stronger as you cet closer to the core.
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.
gravity
Weight describes earth's gravity.As objects get closer to Earth, the pull of Earth's gravity increase
Yes. the mutually attracting forces of gravity hold the moon and earth together and cause the earth's tidal forces.
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.
gravity
As we get closer to the center of the earth, the gravity of earth increases and the heat too increases...thats what i think.
It changes all the time, as Earth gets closer to, and farther from, the Sun, in its yearly orbit.
Yes, gravity decreases with the square of the distance.