For it is too weak. The earth is more than a few million times the mass of us, and yet the acceleration is still only like 9.8m/s2. So we would never be able to feel the gravitational pull between people.
Because we r not sensitive.lol
Yes, it does. Another opinion: No it doesn't. The formula for the force of gravity involves masses and distance. There is no gravitational force where there is no mass, like, for example between ideas, or between sounds. I notice that the question offers no guidance as to what "non-matter" is.
Because the acceleration of gravity is almost precisely the same anywhere on earth. Weight is the force of gravity on a mass. However, if you have extremely sensitive equipment, you can detect the different weight of a given mass at different locations.
Gravity is a force that pulls two objects together. Gravity exists between two objects that have mass. Gravity exists in the whole universe
The spot light Effect
Gravity. Even though we notice the effect of gravity every day it is the weakest of the fundamental forces. However you could argue that the strong nuclear force is the weakest acting between these two bodies, because they are too far away from each other for this force to act.
Because we r not sensitive.lol
Because gravity is relatively constant anywhere on Earth's surface.
Because gravity is relatively constant anywhere on Earth's surface.
YES! the size of the planet does effect your throwing ability! If you get each planets' gravity number then you will notice that the smaller the planet the less gravity force/attraction it will have. If you go to Jupiter and throw a football the gravity will pull down on the football faster and make your throw much shorter than it would on Earth because Jupiter has a bigger gravity number then Earth.
if we are near the full side of the moon, the temperature will drop. If you notice, when we have anew moon, it's a bit warmer. In a word, magnetism. (Gravity)
Yes, it does. Another opinion: No it doesn't. The formula for the force of gravity involves masses and distance. There is no gravitational force where there is no mass, like, for example between ideas, or between sounds. I notice that the question offers no guidance as to what "non-matter" is.
The pull of gravity depends on the mass of the two objects attracted to one another, and the distance between them. The greater the distance between the two objects, the weaker the pull of gravity. For that reason gravity is strongest at low elevations (closer to the center of mass of the earth) and weakest at high ones (farther from the center of mass), although the difference is essentially impossible to notice.
When there is that force that pulls downward. Example, when you climb a mountain. You will fell that there is that gravity pulling downward.
Because the objects are tiny compared with the Earth, the comparative gravitational force is very small.
Gravity will bend (influence) the path of photons (light). This effect is minimal: you would need A LOT of mass (like a black hole or a neutron star) and a very long distance for the photon to travel and to be measured to notice this effect. It is a little strange, as photons are considered to be massless, and should not be influenced by the mass (gravity) of another object. 1. Photons have energy; energy is mass (more or less); mass is affected by gravity. 2. Photons are probably affected by gravity, but you have to worry about refraction of light about a star. So, I think, the total angle is not due to gravity alone. Of course, maybe refraction is a gravity thing?
People do not notice flight