An object's gravitational pull is determined by the object's mass.
The weight on an object is the gravitaional pull.
All obects have a gravitational pull. The larger it is, the stronger the pull.
gravitational pull
Mass, not density, and the closeness of objects, affects an object's gravitational pull. Density is not dependent on an object's size, but mass is. The more massive an object, and/or the closer an object is to another, the greater its gravitational pull.
Yes. A gravitational force attracts every mass toward every other mass.
the grvitational pull of an object depents on its mass and density for power.
An object have greater gravitational pull closer from earth. As we get farther from earth, the gravitational pull becomes weaker. That is why objects sufficiently away from the earth do not fall on it.
That is also known as the object's WEIGHT.
An object has a gravitational pull due to its mass. Gravitational force is a fundamental force of nature that arises from the mass of an object pulling other objects towards it. The greater the mass of an object, the stronger its gravitational pull.
when there is a pull of an object towards the grand
Gravitational pull
No, the size of an object does not determine the amount of gravitational pull it exerts on other objects. Gravitational force depends on the mass of the objects involved and the distance between them, as described by Newton's law of universal gravitation.