Want this question answered?
That's a very low weight; approximately the weight of a small baby. Anyway, gravity on Earth is 9.8 newton/kilogram, gravity on Mercury is 3.7 newton/kilogram. You can write a proportion for that; or else you can first work out the mass, then use this to calculate the weight on Mercury.
If the gravity of the Earth was 0, the law of uniformity would mean that gravity everywhere else in the universe would also be 0 and it therefore could not exist. If you somehow managed to make just the Earth's gravity 0 the planet would fly apart as a result of the centrifugal force of its spin and the Moon would fly off and orbit the Sun on its own.
everywhere in the universe
It was believed for quite a while that gravity would slow the expansion of the Universe down. But it is now known that the Universe is expanding faster and faster (apparently it tends towards an exponential growth), so there must be something else, that is pushing the Universe apart, more strongly than gravity can it together. This "something" is called "dark energy".
The source of gravity of the moon is the same as anywhere else, all mass attracts all other mass, the effects depend on the amounts and the proximity
well, to be honest, if sir Issac Newton didn't discover the law of gravity, someone else probably will came up with that.
That it was a universal attractive force between two objects with mass, no matter how distant from each other they are.
Math term CALCULAS xD
Capler
Hans Lippershey, who was a German lens maker
One way is that without gravity the earth and sun would fall apart because there is nothing else to hold them together.
Because Sir Isaac Newton was one day watching an apple fall from a tree. Eventually he had come up wiith the force of gravity. Also, apples are affected by gravity, just like nearly everything else.
That's a very low weight; approximately the weight of a small baby. Anyway, gravity on Earth is 9.8 newton/kilogram, gravity on Mercury is 3.7 newton/kilogram. You can write a proportion for that; or else you can first work out the mass, then use this to calculate the weight on Mercury.
Sir Isaac Newton. Who else?"
To discover is a verb meaning to find something, and usually the first to discover it. A discoverer is a noun, meaning someone who discovers something. However, learners can discover knowledge new to them--even though someone else discovered that knowledge originally. For example, Newton discovered gravity-- in class experiments, a student today 'discovers' the truth of Newton's original discovery but the student is not the original discoverer.There is a huge difference between a discoverer and an inventor. A discoverer finds or explains a principle that already existed, but needed discovered. An inventor creates something that did not exist before, or a new version of something previously invented. As an example, several men were working on inventing the telephone-- Bell just got to the patent office first.
To discover is a verb meaning to find something, and usually the first to discover it. A discoverer is a noun, meaning someone who discovers something. However, learners can discover knowledge new to them--even though someone else discovered that knowledge originally. For example, Newton discovered gravity-- in class experiments, a student today 'discovers' the truth of Newton's original discovery but the student is not the original discoverer.There is a huge difference between a discoverer and an inventor. A discoverer finds or explains a principle that already existed, but needed discovered. An inventor creates something that did not exist before, or a new version of something previously invented. As an example, several men were working on inventing the telephone-- Bell just got to the patent office first.
they