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No. Gravitational force is the pull an object experience from gravity. Gravitational energy is the energy an object has from its position in a gravitational field. An object moving up in a gravitational field gains gravitational energy.
Gravitational Force
The measure that describes the amount of gravitational force of an object is its mass. Mass is a fundamental property of matter that determines the amount of gravitational force it exerts on other objects. The greater the mass of an object, the stronger its gravitational force.
A force generated b every object with mass that pulls things towards it. The bigger the mass of an object the bigger the gravitational force.
No mass is not the magnitude of the force due to gravity on an object. Mass is the stuff of which the object is composed. The magnitude of the gravitational forces between the object and Earth ... or whatever planet the object happens to be on ... is the object's "weight".
Move the objects closer together.
The force increases. Each time the distance decreases by half, the force becomes 4 times greater.
The closer to the core of the earth an object gets, the higher the gravitational pull.
it is lighter or heavier
The object's weight is the measure of the gravitational force on that object.
Yes, everything has a gravitational force, but the force of this differs from object to object.
It decreases. For the greater the mass of the object, the more gravity is has.
The gravitational force exerted on an object, according to classical mechanics, is the product of the gravitational constant, the object's mass, and the mass of the object exerting the gravitational force divided by the square of the magnitude of the position vector starting from the object exerting the gravitational force and pointing to the object which we are measuring the force exerted onto. And all of this is times the negative of that same position vector.
It doubles. F=(Gm1m2)/r2 G=gravitational constant, m1= mass of one object, m2= mass of other object, r= distance between them, F=gravitational force (It also begins to exert double the force on other objects nearby.)
No. Gravitational force is the pull an object experience from gravity. Gravitational energy is the energy an object has from its position in a gravitational field. An object moving up in a gravitational field gains gravitational energy.
There is no minimum mass at which point an object (celestial or otherwise) begins to have a gravitational force. Any object with mass has an associated gravitational force. The magnitude of that force is proportional to to the mass of the object - lots of mass results in lots of gravitational force; little masses result in only little gravitational force.
Gravitational force of the moon is 1/6th the gravitational force of the Earth. The larger the object, the greater gravitational force it will have.