true
Space itself does not have gravity, as gravity is a force produced by mass. In space, the gravity experienced depends on the mass of nearby objects, such as planets or stars. If you are far away from any massive objects, you would experience very little gravity, while being close to a massive object would result in stronger gravity.
Tides occur because the strength of an object's gravity depends on the distance from that object. Gravity is stronger at smaller distances. The moons gravity pulls Earth toward it, causing Earth to wobble around a point about a thousand miles below the surface as the moon orbits. Since the water on the far side of Earth experience slightly less lunar gravity than the rest of the planet it lags behind a bit, creating a high tide.
30 ft hole to hole
You should plant them 3 inches apart.
Even when two landforms are far apart, the same types of processes that create and affect landforms apply.
Far, far stronger at 274.0m/s2earth gravity is 9.78m/s2
Gravity can depend on how far apart and how heavy the objects are.
Not as far as i know.
The use of word gravity here is totally wrong as gravity represents the force of gravity which we denote by symbol g, having an approx. value of 9.8 m/s2. When two bodies move apart their Gravitational Force reduces..... The Gravitational force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance b/w their centers. The force of gravity acting on those two bodies remain same on the earth. and it always acts in the downward direction......... Please note that force of gravity and Gravitational Force are two different things...
1. weight 2. and how far apart it is with another object
Uranus's gravity is far stronger than earths.
They hold together with the help of different forces than gravity. Therefore they are not influenced by gravity.
its gravity because it depends on how close of far apart gravity is between the object
Gravity is affected by two key variables: mass and distance. The greater the mass of an object, the stronger its gravitational pull; this is described by Newton's law of universal gravitation. Additionally, the distance between the centers of two masses inversely affects gravity; as the distance increases, the gravitational force decreases. Thus, gravity not only depends on how massive the objects are but also on how far apart they are.
The earth's gravity is far stronger than that of the moon, so it overpowers it.
To lower the center of gravity and thus increase stability. The further the wheels are apart, the less the risk that the vehicle will roll.
The attraction or repulsion between electric charges is stronger when they are closer together and weaker when they are far apart. This is described by Coulomb's law, which states that the force between two charges is directly proportional to the product of the charges and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.