every particle of whatever wants to fall down to the earth the more particles the object has the more it wants to fall basicly because it has more mass.
Large planets have more gravity than smaller ones
If the asteroid is large, its own gravity will pull it together, into a more or less spherical shape. With smaller asteroids, the gravity is not large enough, and the shape will be irregular.
No, gravity depends on mass, not size. Larger objects typically have more mass, and thus more gravity, compared to smaller objects. Gravity follows an inverse square law, so the distance between objects also plays a role in determining the force of gravity between them.
Earth is hafly big, so it has gravity. Larger, it has more gravity. Smaller, it has less gravity.
It would depend on the mass of the planets. The surface gravity of a planet is directly proportional to its mass and inversely proportional to the square of its radius. If two planets have the same mass but different sizes, the smaller planet will have stronger gravity because the surface is closer to the center of mass. Conversely, if two planets are of the same size, the one with more mass will have stronger gravity. Since larger planets usually have more mass than smaller ones they usually have stronger gravity, though not always.
Larger objects have more gravity than smaller objects because they have more mass. Gravity is directly proportional to an object's mass - the more mass an object has, the stronger its gravitational pull. This is described by Newton's law of universal gravitation.
Filled with gravity? It does have gravity, just not as great as Earth's since it is smaller. The greater an object, the more gravity it has to pull objects close to it.
All objects with mass exert a gravitational force, but the force is determined by the mass of the objects and their distance from each other, not their size. So, it's the mass, not the size, that determines the strength of gravity.
Yes. Everything has gravity. Larger and denser objects have more gravity than smaller objects that are less dense.
the bigger the planet the more gravity.the smaller the planet the least gravity
Yes it does, because the Earth is smaller than Saturn it will have less gravity than Saturn and because Saturn is bigger it will have more gravity
the bigger the planet the more gravity it has because it needs to hold it self together so it has more gravity than smaller planets who require a small amount of gravity to hold themselves toghther