Straight. If gravity did not pull a planet into an elliptical orbit, momentum would cause it to continue straight ahead at the same speed it had been moving. If the Sun's gravity were to magically disappear, the Earth would fly off into space at 67,000 miles per hour.
The first thing is that you calculae you weight. Then it depends on the gravity the planet of your choice. Say planet Saturn. The Saturn planets gravity is 38%. So if you weigh 100 lbs, then you would multiply 100 by .38. Then your total would be 108.00 lbs.
Each planet is attracted by the Sun's gravity. A planet has its own forward speed, which causes it to tend to travel at constant speed in a straight line. The Sun's gravity pulls at right angles to the planet's forward speed, causing it to curve towards the Sun all the time. Isaac Newton proved that the curvature in the path followed is equivalent to acceleration towards the centre of curvature - the Sun in this case. He also proved that the amount of acceleration (curvature) is exactly explained by the law of gravity and the laws of motion.
Planets travel slowest at their aphelion – the point in their orbit farthest from the sun. This is when they are moving at their slowest speed due to the effect of gravity.
Gravity keeps a planet in orbit. Inertia tries to make the planet move in a straight line. The balance between the two makes the planet orbit a sun.
The Jet-stream certainly does. Planes can use the jet-stream to reduce the amount of fuel it takes to travel from one side of the planet to the other. This is because - so long as the jet-stream is flowing in the same direction the plane wants to travel - it can 'push' the plane forward, which uses less fuel.
No, gravity only pulls objects towards each other in a forward direction. There is no evidence to suggest that gravity can travel backwards.
it is the gravity affects the weight
travel horizontally
The first thing is that you calculae you weight. Then it depends on the gravity the planet of your choice. Say planet Saturn. The Saturn planets gravity is 38%. So if you weigh 100 lbs, then you would multiply 100 by .38. Then your total would be 108.00 lbs.
No, electrical charge does not interact with gravity.
i dont think so. So the answer is probably no.......
It has to get up to 7km a second to get out of earth's orbit, then it orbits around earth.
Each planet is attracted by the Sun's gravity. A planet has its own forward speed, which causes it to tend to travel at constant speed in a straight line. The Sun's gravity pulls at right angles to the planet's forward speed, causing it to curve towards the Sun all the time. Isaac Newton proved that the curvature in the path followed is equivalent to acceleration towards the centre of curvature - the Sun in this case. He also proved that the amount of acceleration (curvature) is exactly explained by the law of gravity and the laws of motion.
For the purposes of the argument, I am assuming that the earth already has a velocity (Speed and Direction). Any mass in space (i.e. a low gravity environment), would travel in a straight line until it comes into proximity of another object of sufficient mass.Basically, the earth would travel in a straight line until it came across another star, at which point it would change direction.If you want to think in bigger contexts, you could say that the earth will travel in a massive orbit around the galaxy since the galaxy's core is of sufficient mass to affect the direction of travel of earth.
Photons are affected by gravity because they have energy and momentum, which can be influenced by gravitational fields. Gravity can cause photons to change direction or lose energy as they travel through space. This effect is known as gravitational lensing.
Planets travel slowest at their aphelion – the point in their orbit farthest from the sun. This is when they are moving at their slowest speed due to the effect of gravity.
From this southern-most point on planet earth, to any anywhere, you must travel north.