Wasn't it discovered by Sir Issac Newton when an apple fell from a tree and hit him on the head?
India
I don't think there is a scientific concept called "gravity light". There is gravity, and there is light. The two are not directly related.
I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.
Of those three questions, the only one that makes any sense is the last one. Gravity doesn't come from a place (the "Where" part) or a thing (the "What" part). Gravity is strongly suspected to have come into existence at the time of the Big Bang, along with the other three fundamental forces. If the Theory of Everything people are right, at extremely high energies the forces combine; gravity would probably have been the first to separate out, at about one Planck time after the Big Bang (a "Planck time" is about 5 x 10-44 seconds).
Gravity is directly related to mass. More mass, more gravity. Less mass, less gravity.
Isaac Newton did......................
Isaac Newton
Its the balance point.
India
I don't think there is a scientific concept called "gravity light". There is gravity, and there is light. The two are not directly related.
The concept of gravity was discovered in England by Sir Isaac Newton. It started with an apple falling down from an apple tree, an incident observed by Newton.
Acceleration of rotating objects
Mass is the amount of matter in an object. Mass remains unaffected by gravity. Weight is a measure of the gravitational pull on an object and is therefore affected by gravity.
Concept of Center of Gravity In Operation Torch the enemy's operational center of gravity is the control North Africa and the Mediterranean Sea.
Please clarify what you mean by "gravity light". I am not aware of any physical concept commonly called by that name.
Gravity has been around as long as there has been mass. They come together; you can't separate them.
I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.I guess the scientific concept that is closest to the "built-in gravity" would be the mass. In that case, the answer is "no". The force between two objects does change, depending on the distance.