First the object get faraway more and more, and step by step when it is getting far, it is not more orbiting, so we cannot say that it is a orbiting object now,but it is wandering object.
Well it is orbiting and it is caused by gravity, centripetal and centrifugal forces
The relationship between decreased mass and decreased gravity is inversely proportional. This means that as the mass of an object decreases, the force of gravity pulling on it also decreases. This is described by Newton's law of universal gravitation.
Gravity keeps your feet on the ground. Gravity keeps all orbiting objects in orbit around the object they are orbiting. The force of gravity decreases as a square of the distance between two objects. Gravity is the weakest of the fundamental forces. Gravity is an attractive force between any two objects that have mass.
Gravity I guess :-)
Gravity and Inertia. The gravity keeps the planet, moon etc. going in a circle and inertia keeps it going (inertia is the tendency of a moving object to continue in a straight line or a stationary object to remain in place. If there was no gravity the planet, moon etc. would just go in a straight line but with gravity it pulls it in a circle like a string attached to an object at the center.
There is no such thing as 'zero gravity,' as even if you went a million lightyears away from an object, it's gravity would still have a minor affect on you. The only way to feel no gravity from an individual body such as the earth is to be in free fall. This is why the astronauts orbiting the earth dont feel its gravity, as contrary to popular belief, orbiting is actually just free falling at an angle where you constantly miss the object you are orbiting. Hope this helped!
The simplest and best answer to that question is: -- Without gravity, there would be no orbits. -- Once you completely understand gravity, you can figure out everything there is to know about orbits, because it all comes from the behavior of gravity.
When the gravitational forces on an object in space are balanced, we call it zero gravity or weightlessness. This occurs when the object is in free fall or orbiting the Earth without any external forces acting on it to counteract gravity.
If the object distance is decreased in a pin hole camera, the image size will increase. If the object is too close, the full image will not be formed and the screen will appear dark.
The relationship between decreased mass and decreased gravity is directly proportional. This means that as the mass of an object decreases, the force of gravity acting on it will also decrease. This relationship is described by Newton's law of universal gravitation.
No. Mass is an intrinsic property of an object and doesn't change, regardless of the environment into which the object is placed. The weight of an object, however will change depending on the gravity acting upon it.
No. Gravity is responsible for all 'orbits'. If there were no other body attracting it, the orbiting object would sail off in a straight line.