The particles of rock and dust that the Earth much later would be made from had gravity. Much, much, much later, the planet was formed.
Every object that has mass also has gravititational attraction, even your body. Even a sewing needle has gravity.
Yes, gravity does depend on the planet you are on. The force of gravity is determined by the mass of the planet and your distance from its center. Therefore, gravity will be different on each planet based on these factors.
the sun's gravity pulls the planets towards it but the other planet's gravity helps keep the planet not get sucked towards the sun. With gravity working this creates the planet to orbit the sun
No. The strength of gravity on a planet depends on its size and mass.
The gravity of a planet is directly proportional to its mass, and inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the center of mass. For the gravity on the surface of the planet, the distance is just the planet's radius. Thus, if a planet has three times the mass, it has three times the gravity. If you are three times as far away, the gravity decreases by a factor of nine.
A planet gets its force of gravity from its mass and the distance from its center. The more massive the planet, the stronger its gravitational pull will be. Gravity is a fundamental force of nature that attracts all objects with mass towards each other.
a planet broke apart and the moon was captured by earth's gravity
Yes, gravity does depend on the planet you are on. The force of gravity is determined by the mass of the planet and your distance from its center. Therefore, gravity will be different on each planet based on these factors.
nor plants or animals. bacteria came first
Gravity comes with mass so since a planet has mass there is some gravity. the bigger the planet the more mass it has. smaller planets have less gravity. so either way there is always some gravity on a planet.
The gravity on Mars or any other planet pulls you toward the planet's center.
No Mercury, either the metal or the planet is not equal to gravity. Gravity is a force of nature, not a planet or a substance.
The larger the planet mass, the bigger force of gravity it has.
All planets have gravity.
Where there is mass there is gravity.
the sun's gravity pulls the planets towards it but the other planet's gravity helps keep the planet not get sucked towards the sun. With gravity working this creates the planet to orbit the sun
Mercury, because it's the smallest if you don't consider Pluto to be a planet.
Gravity depends largely on mass, the bigger the planet the greater the gravity should be