Gravity is a force and its effect on a mass is measured in newtons.
distance between them decreases. gravity is inversely proportional to square of distance between two objects, according to newtons law of gravity
There is a very great relationship between density and specific gravity. Density contributes to the weight of a substance under specific gravity.
It weight is mass times acceleration of gravity of 9.81 m/sec/sec Weight = 0.26 x 9.81 = 2.55 Newtons
The force of gravity between two objects is measured in newtons. This is no different, technically, than what weight "should" be measured in. We use pounds and kilograms, but we should be using newtons, to be scientifically correct.
That depends on where it is. If it's on the surface of the Earth, then the forces of gravity in both directions between the block and the Earth are about 9.807 newtons (2.204 pounds). But if you take the block to the moon's surface, for example, then the forces of gravity in both directions between the block and the Moon are about 1.62 newtons (5.84 ounces).
You can't really convert kilograms to newtons, since they measure different things. The relationship is:weight = mass x gravity For normal Earth gravity, you can use a factor of about 9.8 newton/kilogram for gravity.
distance between them decreases. gravity is inversely proportional to square of distance between two objects, according to newtons law of gravity
No relationship at all.
There is a very great relationship between density and specific gravity. Density contributes to the weight of a substance under specific gravity.
It weight is mass times acceleration of gravity of 9.81 m/sec/sec Weight = 0.26 x 9.81 = 2.55 Newtons
The force of gravity between two objects is measured in newtons. This is no different, technically, than what weight "should" be measured in. We use pounds and kilograms, but we should be using newtons, to be scientifically correct.
Newtons.
weight = mass x gravity
That depends on where it is. If it's on the surface of the Earth, then the forces of gravity in both directions between the block and the Earth are about 9.807 newtons (2.204 pounds). But if you take the block to the moon's surface, for example, then the forces of gravity in both directions between the block and the Moon are about 1.62 newtons (5.84 ounces).
Everything
Also if you mean Newtons in terms of weight the formula is Newtons = Mass * Gravity
i have no clue