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Gravitational potential energy is proportional to the object's height and its mass. So if the car has more mass than the bowling ball has, then it also has more gravitational potential energy.
The couch you are sitting on
The strength of a gravitational pull depends on several factors. It depends on the product of the masses of two separate objects, so you can't say "one" object has the biggest pull. It also depends on the separation distance of the two objects, so two very massive objects very far apart could actually have a smaller pull on each other than two people sitting next to each other.Even if one asked what object has the strongest gravitational field, one would have to specify the distance from the gravity center of the object. I would suspect that the strongest gravitational fields are in or around massive black holes.
because maybe the other objects are moving
he discover by.......... when he was sitting under an apple tree,he saw that apple had fallen down by the gravitational force by this he came to know that extra force(gravitational force)had pushed the apple down
Between every two objects there is an attractive force. Even the person sitting next to you in the classroom
elephant truck A basketball Your hand a camel NOT A BIKE!
Gravitational potential energy is proportional to the object's height and its mass. So if the car has more mass than the bowling ball has, then it also has more gravitational potential energy.
by the gravitational pull
YES!
f=gm1m2/r2 f=1002009.8/6*6 f=5444.444
Isaac Newton created many of the fundamental ideas of gravity and how it works. He came up with the idea of gravity when he was sitting in his chair and an apple fell. It basically says things with mass are attracted to other things with mass and its equations helped us find, very accurately, the orbits of the planets as well as many other things simply dealing with gravitational attraction.
All objects have a gravitational pull on all the other objects. even your computer monitor has a slight amount of pull on you. The reason you don't notice them is that they are so insignificant that we can't even possibly detect the pull with the best technology. lets say that your computer monitor was 5 kg, you weighed 80 kg, and you were sitting 1 meter away. the force on you would by the computer would be 0.00000002668 newtons (that's really small). the earth has a noticeable force on us, but look how big it is! so any object with mass has a gravitational pull on any other object with mass, we just can't see or feel because it is so small.
The couch you are sitting on
The Earth is not floating in space; it is actually orbiting the Sun due to gravitational forces. It is not sitting on anything specific but is instead held in its orbit by the gravitational pull of the Sun.
The strength of a gravitational pull depends on several factors. It depends on the product of the masses of two separate objects, so you can't say "one" object has the biggest pull. It also depends on the separation distance of the two objects, so two very massive objects very far apart could actually have a smaller pull on each other than two people sitting next to each other.Even if one asked what object has the strongest gravitational field, one would have to specify the distance from the gravity center of the object. I would suspect that the strongest gravitational fields are in or around massive black holes.
he discover by.......... when he was sitting under an apple tree,he saw that apple had fallen down by the gravitational force by this he came to know that extra force(gravitational force)had pushed the apple down