The effect of dubling the massesa and halving the distance is to increase the gravitational force by a factor of 16.
Yes. At a greater distance, the gravitational attraction between two objects is less.
The larger the mass of either object, the greater the gravitational force.
the gravitational attraction would increase, because the more mass something has the more gravitational pull it has.
Mass and distance.
If you increase the mass, you increase the gravitational force proportionally. If you increase the distance between two masses, you decrease the gravitational force between them by and amount proportional to the square of the distance.
Gravity would be increased by one.
the man was fatter than i could imagine
If there is more mass, there will be more gravitational attraction.
Yes. At a greater distance, the gravitational attraction between two objects is less.
Gravitational forces between objects depend only on their masses and the distance between them. Velocity has no effect.
The larger the mass of either object, the greater the gravitational force.
If the magnitude of each of two charges is doubled, then the direction of the force between them doesn't change, but its magnitude increases by a factor of 4.
A rectangle has two dimensions - length and width. Only if both dimensions are doubled, then the perimeter will be doubled.
the gravitational attraction would increase, because the more mass something has the more gravitational pull it has.
Mass and distance.
If you increase the mass, you increase the gravitational force proportionally. If you increase the distance between two masses, you decrease the gravitational force between them by and amount proportional to the square of the distance.
since gravitational force is inversely propostional to the sq. Root of distance between them. When distance increases the gravitational force decreasses and it is vice versa.