The Earth (you said to include it) Venus, the stars, the sun (which is technically a star), and Mercury?
gravity
gravity
Ptolemy's view of the universe is that all celestial objects, including planets, stars, the Sun and the Moon orbit the Earth.
All objects everywhere in the universe have a gravitational pull.
The branch of Earth Science that studies objects beyond the Earth's atmosphere is astronomy. It is the study of the sun, planets, stars, galaxies, and the universe.
It means extremely large, exceedingly great and immense. Or relating to astronomy, the science that deals with the material universe beyond the Earth's atmosphere
The medieval view of the Earth and the planets was the Earth was a motionless object suspended in the middle of the universe, and everything else in the universe, the sun, planets, stars, or any other astronomical objects, revolved around the Earth.
Not quite; outer space means space beyond the Earth's atmosphere. The universe includes everything (including the Earth) - so you and I live in the universe, but not in outer space.
Anything in the universe that has mass, including you, me, a pencil, a piece of dust, all have gravity and are attracted to each other. Example: You are not just attracted toward Earth . . . the Earth is also attracted to you. From this can be said that objects with mass attract each other. It's just that you notice the gravity attraction from a large body like Earth because it is so huge. Also, Earth is close to you.
It depends on what you are comparing it to. If you are comparing it to an ant, then it is HUGE but if you are comparing it to the universe it is extremely tiny.
it applies to the earth and moon because their two objects in the universe that attract each other.
it applies to the earth and moon because their two objects in the universe that attract each other.