I think you mean, "pull." And that force is gravity. You see, our solar system revolves around the sun, and the sun's gravitational pull keeps all the planets circling around the sun day and night. Every object has gravity to pull on other objects, which is why the moon rotates around Earth, because of Earth's gravity. Hope this helps!
The gravitic force on any object on Earth's surface is called, "Weight".
If we're handling it on or near Earth, we call that the object's "weight".
If an object with a mass of 20 kg is on the surface of the earth or near it, then the object and the earth are attracting each other with a force of 196 newtons (44.1 pounds).
If the object is on or near the Earth's surface, then most people call that force the object's "weight". Nobody ever gives any attention to the gravitational force that the object exerts on the Earth, probably because it happens to be exactly the same as the object's weight on the Earth. The neat thing about it, however, is that the same force is also the Earth's weight on the object.
The gravitational force on any object near Earth's surface is approximately 9.8 m/s^2, directed towards the center of the Earth. This force is responsible for the weight of objects on Earth and is a fundamental force in shaping the motion of objects in the universe.
About 9.8 Newton/kilogram (9.8 Newton force on every kilogram).
The force that pulls objects to the ground.
When an object is falling and the force of gravity is the only force acting on it, the object experiences a constant acceleration towards the Earth due to gravity. This acceleration is approximately 9.8 meters per second squared near the surface of the Earth.
Yes - IF debris strike the nearby object ... including gasses. The force (on Earth) from compressing the atmosphere is missing.
The strength of the gravitational forces between the Earth and an object on or near it is called the "weight" of the object. In reality, there are two equal and opposite forces going on. The Earth attracts the object toward it, with a force that is the weight of the object on Earth. At the same time, the object attracts the Earth toward it, with a force that is the weight of the Earth on the object. The forces are equal. When the object is our body, we obsess about the first one. Nobody ever talks about the second one.
The force of gravity on any object near the surface of the earth and close to sea level is 9.80 meters per second per second.
You can convert that to kilograms (reminder: 1 kg = 1000 grams); then multiply by the value of the gravitational field, which near Earth's surface is about 9.8 newton/kilogram. This will give you the weight in newton.