More mass --> more gravity.
The further two objects are from each other, the smaller the gravity, the equation for this is: Mass 1 X Mass 2 ---------------------- Distance Squared
think of yourself dude, increase or decrease?
More mass = more gravitational attraction.
-- increase the mass of either one -- move them closer together
no, weight is just an objects mass with the force of gravity, so as one increases the other will increase too
Increase mass, increase gravity. Increase distance, decrease gravity (although you never reach zero). The formula for calculating force of gravity is: Fg=(G*m1*m2)/d^2 where Fg is force of gravity, G is the universal gravity constant, m1 and m2 are the masses of the two objects, and d is the distance between the two objects
Gravity has no effect on mass, and mass has no effect on gravity. The characteristic behavior of gravity is that the force between two masses is directly proportional to the product of the masses, so if one or both masses were to increase, the mutual gravitational forces between them would increase in proportion to the increase in the product. That happens regardless of what the starting or ending mass happens to be, because mass has no effect on gravity.
More mass = more force of gravity.
The force of gravity increases with mass. The more massive a body is, the larger the force of gravity it will produce.
No. Gravity always behaves predictably, according to the same formula,no matter what happens to the mass of objects.However, the forces that gravity creates between objects do depend onthe masses of the objects, and if the mass of either object changes, thenthe forces between them change.
Two things reduce the force of gravity between two objects: an increase in the distance between the two objects or decrease in mass of the two objects
Gravity decrease as you get farther, and every mass has gravitational pull.