gravitational force - (physics) the force of attraction between all masses in the universe; especially the attraction of the earth's mass for bodies near its surface; "the more remote the body the less the gravity"; "the gravitation between two bodies is proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them"; "gravitation cannot be held responsible for people falling in love"--Albert Einstein
An attraction or force between particles that causes them to combine.
in a single word: force in a sentence: a fundamental force of attraction that occurs between two masses in an equation: F=Gm1m2/d^2 where: G= gravitational constant=6.673*10^-11 m1= the mass of one body m2= the mass of another body d=the distance between the two bodies
The tides are the result of the gravitational attraction between the water, the sun, and the moon.
The gravitational pull of the Sun and the Moon cause the tidal bulges.
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Gravitational force exerts an attraction on objects.
A black hole has the greatest force of gravitational attraction. Even light rays can't escape.
Nothing, the force in question IS gravitational attraction.
Gravitational force is a force of attraction between any two objects with mass, acting over a distance.
The attraction between two objects is called force of attraction or gravitational force.
gravitational force
the gravitational attraction of apple is sun.
By the force of its gravitational attraction.
Gravitational force.
gravitational force of attraction/gravity -- force -- weight -- centripetal force, under some circumstances
Gravitational force is the force of attraction that exists between two masses due to their mass, while attraction force is a more general term that can refer to any force that pulls objects towards each other, such as electrostatic force or magnetic force. Gravitational force specifically refers to the force that acts between masses due to gravity.
gravitational force