It's really not possible to select the correct item from
your list of multiple choices if you won't show me the list.
At a greater distance, the gravitational force becomes less.
Yes it does.
Wrong. When the mass of either or both objects increases, then the forces of gravitational attraction between them also increase.
Gravity decrease as you get farther, and every mass has gravitational pull.
Objects of greater mass have more gravitational pull.
The magnituide of the gravitational force between two objects will increase if -- the mass of one or both objects increases OR -- the distance between their centers-of-mass decreases.
At a greater distance, the gravitational force becomes less.
the gravitational force will decrease
their masses increase
As mass increases.
It increases
Yes it does.
the gravitational forces.Answer:As mass increases the gravitational force increases. Also, as the nearness of the objects increases the gravitational force increases, but this is usually thought of as the distance between the objects decreasing
Yes. It is directly proportional to the product of the masses of the two objects and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
Move the objects closer together.
The gravitational force that one object exerts on another will decrease in magnitude. In the formula for gravitational force, the force is inversely proportional to the square of distance. This means that reducing the distance between the objects will increase the magnitude of gravitational force.
the objects with the greatest mass and the ones that are closest to other objects