Yes, the closer you are to the center off the gravitational point the stronger it is. unless you are actually in the center, then you are weightless, because your mass is equal in all directions.
Partially. Every bit of matter on and within Earth, including the core, contributes to Earth's gravity. Other objects have their own gravity.
false, gravity comes from how much mass a object has, not from the center of the Earth.
the center of the earth is at the core so yeah i guess so because gravity pulls stuff toward it?.
No. Earth's core is composed of metal. Magma generally forms in the upper mantle. However, convection can bring material from the core-mantle boundary to form magma.
Zero. The attraction of different parts of the Earth, in different directions, would cancel, for an object at the center of the Earth.
False. Gravity on the moon is 1/6 that of Earth.
True
No, the center of the earth is called the core.
FALSE. The earths center is made up of solid dense materials, predominantly iron and nickel. (NiFe).
false
False. Gravity on the moon is 1/6 that of Earth.
true
no it is false
True
False
No, the center of the earth is called the core.
false, meters are asteroids in the earth atmosphere
true
no it is not because gravity brings things down to earth and magnetism can push things up.
False. You will have the same mass on our moon, but weigh 1/6th as much as on the Earth.
False, the crust is Earth's outer skin of rock. The core is a body of metal at earth's center.
At the center of Aristotle's model was the concept of the unmoved mover, which served as the ultimate cause and source of motion in the universe. It was an eternal, unchanging being that set everything in motion without being moved itself.