Gravity is the pull from matter. Less matter means less gravity, so yes.
Gravitational pull is less for Mercury, Venus, Mars and Uranus. And th eother planets have higher gravitational pull.
Yes. Rock comes and packs together which is what smaller planets are made of. Gas sort of is held together by the core of a planet but still doesn't have enough pressure to hold all the gases tight to the core.
Planets have less mass than the sun, hence, they have weaker gravitational fields.
Weight is determined by the gravitational pull of a planet. Planets with stronger gravitational forces will make you weigh more, while planets with weaker gravitational forces will make you weigh less. The difference in weight on different planets is due to variations in their mass and size.
If the force is gravity, the answer is yes. Gravity "pulls" on an object in proportion to its mass. A heavier (more massive) object is pulled on by gravity more than a lighter (less massive) object. A football tackle is pulled on by gravity more than the average grade school student.
Gravitational pull is less for Mercury, Venus, Mars and Uranus. And th eother planets have higher gravitational pull.
If the objects are the same distance apart (center to center), then the gravitational force between two less massive objects will be less than the gravitational force between two more massive objects.
Humans are not attracted to walls by gravitational force because walls do not have sufficient mass to exert a noticeable gravitational pull on us. The force of gravity is proportional to the mass of an object, so walls, being much less massive than the Earth, do not exert a significant gravitational force on us.
Yes. Rock comes and packs together which is what smaller planets are made of. Gas sort of is held together by the core of a planet but still doesn't have enough pressure to hold all the gases tight to the core.
If the gravitational force is less than the buoyant force, the drag force will act in the opposite direction of the gravitational force.
There is no such thing as gravitational force. Mass curves spacetime and stuff moves through spacetime in straight spacetime paths. The effect of this is what we call gravity. The more the mass the greater the curvature of spacetime.
Yes, the more massive object will exert a greater force of gravity on another object compared to a less massive one, as gravitational force is directly proportional to the product of the masses of the two objects involved.
Every heavenly body due their mass have gravitational force. Since the moon is significantly less massive than Earth gravity on the moon is weaker than it is on Earth.
Planets have less mass than the sun, hence, they have weaker gravitational fields.
Weight is determined by the gravitational pull of a planet. Planets with stronger gravitational forces will make you weigh more, while planets with weaker gravitational forces will make you weigh less. The difference in weight on different planets is due to variations in their mass and size.
If the force is gravity, the answer is yes. Gravity "pulls" on an object in proportion to its mass. A heavier (more massive) object is pulled on by gravity more than a lighter (less massive) object. A football tackle is pulled on by gravity more than the average grade school student.
Yes. The massive giant planets have far more moons than the less massive terrestrial planets.