Mass will exerts a force unless it is
massless in relative situation
Mass will exerts a force unless it is massless in relative situation
They exert Gravitational Force on each other. It is a force which is directly proportional to Mass of the object
If the object having some mass then for sure it exert a gravitational force.The more the mass the more will be gravity.
There is no minimum mass at which point an object (celestial or otherwise) begins to have a gravitational force. Any object with mass has an associated gravitational force. The magnitude of that force is proportional to to the mass of the object - lots of mass results in lots of gravitational force; little masses result in only little gravitational force.
Mass
Because it has a larger mass
Light does not have weight, acceleration, or mass. It does have direction and can exert force, as seen in phenomena such as radiation pressure.
Gravity is the pull that causes the atmosphere to exert a force called weight. Weight is the force exerted by gravity on an object due to its mass.
Massive objects exert gravitational force. This force attracts other objects with mass towards them. The magnitude of the force depends on the masses of the objects and the distance between them.
All three objects will exert a gravitational force. The strength of the force depends on the mass of each object. The bowling ball will exert the greatest gravitational force due to its larger mass compared to the feather and the book.
I assume you mean, why do they exert gravitational attraction. ANY object with mass, so any object, exerts such a force on ANY other mass.
Light does not have mass, so it does not exert a force by itself. However, light can carry momentum and exert a force on objects it interacts with, such as when light is reflected or absorbed by a surface. This is known as radiation pressure.