Gravity exists between any objects with mass.
The moon is 1/6 the size of earth therefore 1/6 the gravity
Imagine you weighed 180 lbs on the moon you would weight 30lbs but the space suit and breathing euipment is so heavy that even on the moon you would still not be able to jump too far...lol
Gravity is a force that lasts only when the mass/ body that supports it exists. Earth has a magnetic field, as you may know already, and it is caused by the movement of minerals underneath the surface. Once Earth's "lifetime" comes to an end, the earth will erupt. During this time, the Earth's "body" will no longer exist therefore, gravity will disappear.
Basically the question is wrong or the concept of gravity in your brain is wrong, as gravity exists both at moon and earth, but the value of "g" varies as at earth it is 9.81m/s^2, and at moon it is some what around 1.8m/s^2.
gravity zone is the area where gravity exists.
It's not it just has a unique amount of gravity. Even the moon has some gravity.
No. All planets, moons, and stars have gravity. Techincally, anything with mass has gravity, but it is only noticeable with very large objects.
Gravity exists everywhere that mass exists, so the answer is yes.
Gravity exists everywhere in the universe. Even thousands of light years out, the effects of Earth's gravity are still felt, only in tiny, immeasureable amounts.
The force of gravity exists all across the Earth's surface.
Gravity
Yes. Gravity exists everywhere. Within 200 km of its surface, Earth is the dominant gravitational body.
Your question is ambiguous. Are you asking why gravity exists or is gravity or more to the point can Gravity/Magnetism be used as an energy source.
Gravity exists because mass exists.
Residual gravity is the effective gravity that exists between the earth-moon or the earth-sun combination. When two heavenly bodies interact such as the earth and the sun there is a difference in mass which causes a residual gravity to exist in the space between them. This residual gravity is responsible for the earth's orbit.
Yes. All objects have some degree of gravity. So gravity exists everywhere in space.
Gravity is a force that lasts only when the mass/ body that supports it exists. Earth has a magnetic field, as you may know already, and it is caused by the movement of minerals underneath the surface. Once Earth's "lifetime" comes to an end, the earth will erupt. During this time, the Earth's "body" will no longer exist therefore, gravity will disappear.
Yes. Gravity from everything exists everywhere. The moon circles the earth because of gravity. And the same with our earth around our sun. And same with our solar system around our galaxy. Every single thing in our universe has a gravitational pull on everything else.
Yes. All mass exerts a gravitational pull and gravity exists everywhere. Many objects have much stronger gravity than Earth does.