The mutual gravitational attraction.
The attractive gravitational force F between two point masses m1 and m2 a distance r apart is given by
F = Gm1m2 / r2,
where G is Newton's gravitational constant.
The gravitational attraction between two objects depends on both their masses and the distance between them. It is proportional to the product of the masses of the two objects divided by the distance between them (mass1 x mass2)/ distance between.
both of their masses and the distance between them
Gravitational force depends on the masses of both objects and the distance between them. The formula is Gravitational Force = 6.67428 * 10^-11 * Mass of First Object * Mass of Second Object / Distance^2.
both masses, and the square of the distance between both centers of mass
The same as what affects the pull of other objects. The gravitational force between two objects depends on the mass of both objects, and on the distance between them.
The force of gravity between two objects depends on their masses and the distance between them. Increasing the mass of one or both objects or decreasing the distance between them would increase the force of gravity between them.
The gravitational force between two objects depends on the product of their masses and the distance between them.And the forces on both are equal. Regardless of their individual masses.
-- the mass of either one of them-- the distance between their centers of mass.Note that nothing else can change the forces of gravity between them.
The strength of the force of Gravity depends on the mass of the object exerting the gravitational force and the distance between the two objects. Gravity is the inverse of the square of the distance between the two objects, times the two masses. F = (G * m1 * m2)/(r squared) G is the universal gravitational constant G = 6.6726 x 10 -11 N-m 2 /kg 2
MASS of both objects, and the DISTANCE between them.
-- the mass of both objects -- the distance between their centers of mass
The force of gravity between objects is determined by their masses and the distance between them. The greater the masses of the objects, the stronger the gravitational force, while the larger the distance between them, the weaker the force.