In the cavity at the center of the Earth, your weight would be zero, because you would be pulled equally by gravity in all directions.
- The gravitational field of Earth at its center is zero.
Earth's mass creates a gravitational field, which is the effect of the warping of space time any massive body creates.
No. Earth's gravitational field is due to the large mass within it; the electromagnetic field is due to the movement of the metals in its core. There are also the standard differences between a gravitational and an EM field.
All objects within the universe attract all other objects through gravity. as distance increases this attraction lessens to an insignificant amount, however the force is still there. therefore the Earth's gravitational field's range is limitless.
Earth's gravity is caused by its mass (or rather its energy). Everything that has mass will passively generate a gravitational field, even you and me! (Although we are not by far massive enough for the gravitational attraction between us to be noticeable.) It is not caused by the Earth's magnetic field, or the Earth rotation (in fact the rotation counteracts gravity in some places).
The iron nickel core has been determined to actually exist from the examination of meteorites, from the gravitational field of Earth, and from the Earth's density in comparison to its volume.
at the center of earth
earths moon is located basicly on the earths gravitational pull called the ionosphere which is the highest magnetic field of earth
the earth will lose it's gravitational field or the crust and the outer core will start to move inwards because of the earths gravitational field
The atmosphere. Is this a trick question?
When the Eagle landed on the moon it was inside its gravitational field and the eagle had just enough thrust to send it out of the moons gravitational field and back in to the Earths gravitational field when they were going back to the Earth.
because of the earth and moon's magnetic field and gravitational pull
I assume you mean, of the gravitational field? The gravitational field is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. At a distance of 1 Earth radius, the distance from the center of the Earth is twice the distance at the Earth's surface; thus, the field strength is 1/4 what it is on the surface. If at the surface the field strength is about 9.8 meters per second square, divide that by 4 to get the field strength at a distance of one Earth radius from the surface.I assume you mean, of the gravitational field? The gravitational field is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. At a distance of 1 Earth radius, the distance from the center of the Earth is twice the distance at the Earth's surface; thus, the field strength is 1/4 what it is on the surface. If at the surface the field strength is about 9.8 meters per second square, divide that by 4 to get the field strength at a distance of one Earth radius from the surface.I assume you mean, of the gravitational field? The gravitational field is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. At a distance of 1 Earth radius, the distance from the center of the Earth is twice the distance at the Earth's surface; thus, the field strength is 1/4 what it is on the surface. If at the surface the field strength is about 9.8 meters per second square, divide that by 4 to get the field strength at a distance of one Earth radius from the surface.I assume you mean, of the gravitational field? The gravitational field is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. At a distance of 1 Earth radius, the distance from the center of the Earth is twice the distance at the Earth's surface; thus, the field strength is 1/4 what it is on the surface. If at the surface the field strength is about 9.8 meters per second square, divide that by 4 to get the field strength at a distance of one Earth radius from the surface.
The direction of the strongest gravitational force in my office is toward the center of the Earth ... the direction I call "down". I don't have a classroom.
If gravity on the surface of Earth is 9.8Nkg, then at the centre it would be 0Nkg
Earth's mass creates a gravitational field, which is the effect of the warping of space time any massive body creates.
Because the earth behaves like a magnetic field with the center of the earth pulling everything towards it.... do the math.
No. Earth's gravitational field is due to the large mass within it; the electromagnetic field is due to the movement of the metals in its core. There are also the standard differences between a gravitational and an EM field.