yes
No. There's only one type of gravity, and it's the same everywhere.
Sorry; there is no line between gravity and no gravity. Gravity is everywhere.
No, it's slightly lower at higher altitudes, slightly higher near dense rock formations.
Yes. Gravity from everything exists everywhere. The moon circles the earth because of gravity. And the same with our earth around our sun. And same with our solar system around our galaxy. Every single thing in our universe has a gravitational pull on everything else.
It's the principle that pressure, in an enclosed space, distributes in such a way that there is the same pressure everywhere.
yes
No. There's only one type of gravity, and it's the same everywhere.
Nothing. They're two ways of referring to the same law of nature.
The gravity from a specific object (for example, the Sun) will become weaker if you go farther away from that object. The law of gravitation in general, and the gravitational constant, seems to be the same everywhere in the Universe.
Those are different terms used to refer to the same phenomenon.
There is gravity everywhere.
gravity is everywhere
Nothing happens to gravity. It remains the same as it is everywhere else on earth.
By Kirchoff's current law, a series circuit has the same current everywhere.
The earth is not perfect sphere therefore the radius differs from place to place and from Newton Gravitational law force is directly proportional to radius
Yes, and everywhere else, too - gravity operates everywhere.