-- The more mass an object has, the more gravitational force there is between
it and the Earth.
-- But the more mass an object has, the more force is required to accelerate it.
-- The relationship between how much gravitational force there is and how much force
is required trades off just right, so that every mass has the same acceleration.
yes
All objects with any mass have gravity. So basically no, there are no objects whtat would have no gravity.
Because gravity pulls the masses down at the same rate.
Gravity causes all objects to fall to earth at the same time. (some objects do not like paper and yarn because of air resistance. but if you block the air resistance by placing it on a book and dropping, it will fall at the same time. Or if you reduce surface area) Gravity causes all objects to fall with an acceleration of 9.8m/s*2
gravity
yes
True
Gravity causes all objects to accelerate at the same rate in a vacuum. In air there is air resistance which can slow some objects down eg a parachute. So, yes, in a vacuum all objects reach the same speed in the same time period.
All objects with any mass have gravity. So basically no, there are no objects whtat would have no gravity.
Because gravity pulls the masses down at the same rate.
Gravity causes all objects to fall to earth at the same time. (some objects do not like paper and yarn because of air resistance. but if you block the air resistance by placing it on a book and dropping, it will fall at the same time. Or if you reduce surface area) Gravity causes all objects to fall with an acceleration of 9.8m/s*2
gravity
Gravity acts similarly on all objects.
Yes, gravity affects all objects that have mass.
if you are asking that, in general, all objects accelerate at an equal speed due to gravity in free fall, yes.they are slowed by air resistance.
All the objects will float if there will be no gravity. Gravity is the earth's pull on objects.
Gravity affects all of the objects in the universe, but then again, gravity doesn't affect the universe.