You never do. No matter where you are, there will always be a gravitaional pull from the earth on the human. When you move really, really far away, the force becomes infinitesimally small.
I think that gravity is based on mass, so the ?only? way the Earth could noticably lose gravity would be to lose a large amount of mass.
No. Unless unless you are a 1200 pound women then you have your gravitational pull
The earth's pull on objects is the force of gravity.
The pull of Earth on you is called gravity. Gravity is the force that attracts objects with mass towards each other.
The pull of the Sun's gravity is needed to hold the Earth in orbit.
Earth (by definition has a gravity exerting a pull of 1g. Venus is almost the same as Earth but the pull of gravity there is 0.904g. So Earth has more gravity.
Gravity, i think?
gravity.
gravity on earth is about 10N/Kg
Gravity pulls you and the Earth toward each other.
I think that's gravity. Gravity is the pull of a celestial body on other things.
A pull towards earth's center