No. As a simple example consider a donut shape! The center of gravity lies in the middle where the hole is.
That would be at the point where the diagonals of the figure intersect.
centre of mass is nothing the mass (volume) situated at centre which is not at all use full for pt of control. but centre of gravity is that pt at which we can hold the total mass or body .
Usually the centre of gravity is at the centre of the object, scaling from both sides OR centre of mass where the object is stable when holding it up on a pin point
centre of gravity
It is in the centre of the bangle.
Each body has its own centre of gravity. The centre of gravity of two regular shapes - an equilateral triangle and a square will be different so why should the cog of a regular and an irregular shape not be different?
That would be at the point where the diagonals of the figure intersect.
centre of mass is nothing the mass (volume) situated at centre which is not at all use full for pt of control. but centre of gravity is that pt at which we can hold the total mass or body .
Both are correct, but "situated in the center" is slightly more common.
bursco
Belarus.
Right in the centre of mainland Spain
It isn't. Gravity can be viewed as emanating from the centre of a body with mass. As the distance increases from the centre then the gravity decreases.
As compared to Earth, you mean? If an object doesn't change its shape, the center of mass doesn't depend on gravity - and the center of gravity hardly does so.
gravity is a force by which objects are attracted to the centre of.
Gravity pulls it down to where it has the centre of gravity at its lowest, when moving the lowest possible centre of gravity changes so it moves around.
khargoan to be precise.....