Gravity has an effect the instant the bullet leaves the barrel. The bullet starts to fall towards the earth at the same rate as the dropped bullet.
However, (assuming the ground follows the curve of the earth, or you are shooting over water) the dropped bullet will hit the ground/water first. The reason is that the as the fired bullet falls the ground is receding away from it (the curve of the earth).
The extreme example of this is: the bullet is fired fast enough that as it falls, the curve of the earth is 'falling' continuously away below it; we would say this bullet is now in orbit around the planet.
However, if the ground you are shooting over is 'flat' (i.e. flat like a ruler, NOT following the curve of the earth) then: yes, the two bullets will hit the ground at the same time.
The force of gravity on Jupiter is approximately 24.79 m/s^2, which is equivalent to about 24.79 Newtons of force for a 1-kilogram mass.
He discovered gravity?
On the moon, the force exerted by 10 newtons would be approximately 1.63 newtons, because the moon's gravity is about 1/6th of Earth's gravity. This means that objects will weigh much less on the moon compared to Earth.
The Universal Law of Gravitation is a force equation, therefore it should have units of Newtons.
The acceleration due to gravity on Mercury is approximately 3.7 m/s^2. To calculate the force of gravity (weight) in Newtons, one would multiply an object's mass in kilograms by the acceleration due to gravity (3.7 m/s^2).
It doesn't matter whether the object is thrown down, up, horizontally, or diagonally. Once it leaves the thrower's hand, it is accelerated downward by an amount equal to acceleration of gravity on the planet where this is all happening. On Earth, if you throw an object horizontally, it accelerates downward at the rate of 9.8 meters per second2 ... just as it would if you simply dropped it. Whether it's dropped or thrown horizontally, it hits the ground at the same time.
The force of gravity on Earth is approximately 9.81 newtons per kilogram.
Because it depends on gravity to work. -Gravity doesn't work horizontally .
Newtons.
1 kg when dropped accelerates at 9.81 metres per second per second under gravity. Newton's 2nd law says force is mass times acceleration, and the force in Newtons is therefore the mass (1) times the acceleration (9.81), which is 9.81 Newtons. That is the force pulling it down, also termed its weight.
Also if you mean Newtons in terms of weight the formula is Newtons = Mass * Gravity
Newtons
Newtons
A one kilogram mass weighs 9.81 Newtons
Gravity has no effect on an object moving horizontally at a constant speed unless the object is falling downward due to gravity. In that case, gravity will accelerate the object downward while it continues to move horizontally.
If an object weighs 100 newtons on Earth, it would weigh approximately 37.8 newtons on Mars. This is because the gravity on Mars is about 38% of the gravity on Earth.
Standard gravity is measured as 9.8 meters per second squared. This is then multiplied by the mass of something to get the force of gravity on it, which is expressed in Newtons.