Yes. The "pull" of things is gravity, and it pulls all objects downward, toward the center of the Earth.
Yes it does. It also pulls things to other sections of earth's surface.
The simplest answer is quite obviously mass, the heavier an object, the greater the pull of gravity. In fact in physics terminology, weight means the force by which you will be attracted towards the center of the earth. Also Newton's Law of universal gravitation states that the pull of gravity equal the product of the masses of the two bodies involved divided by the square of the distance by which they are apart.
the forces of gravity pull the crumbs towards the earths core but in space the gravity is less so the pull force is not as great as the earths pull
The earth gets it shape from the gravitational pull towards the middle.
The pull of gravity depends on the mass of the two objects attracted to one another, and the distance between them. The greater the distance between the two objects, the weaker the pull of gravity. For that reason gravity is strongest at low elevations (closer to the center of mass of the earth) and weakest at high ones (farther from the center of mass), although the difference is essentially impossible to notice.
A pull towards earth's center
Gravity pulls things towards the centre of the Earth. If this weren't the case, then in different areas of the world gravity would have a different pull.
Gravity
Tonality
gravity
tonality
Tonality
The gravitational pull acting on an object towards the earth's center.
Gravity pulls objects towards the center of the Earth.
Towards the center of the Earth.
gravity
The Earth's gravity pulls the Moon towards it and its center.