The object would crash into the planet.
The object would crash into the planet.
Gravity and inertia
Gravity is the force that pulls objects towards each other, such as the sun and planets in our solar system. Inertia is the tendency of objects to resist changes in their motion. Gravity keeps planets in orbit around the sun by balancing the planets' inertia with the force of gravity pulling them towards the sun.
no. inertia and gravity hold them in their paths.
The more gravity something has, the more gravity it has. A planet, like Jupiter, can have 30-something moons because of it's large mass. And the solar system exists only because the sun has so much mass it generates gravity for all the planets.
The object would crash into the planet.
The movement of the planets (inertia) moves them perpendicular to the sun at about the same rate that the gravity from the sun pulls the planets in. The gravity of the sun is a little stronger as the earth is slowly, but continuously getting closer to the sun.
inertia keeps the planets moving and spinning , and gravity is a force that attracts all objects toward each other.
The sun's gravity is pulling the planets toward it and the planets inertia keeps them moving forward
Gravity is strongest near very massive objects, such as planets and stars. The strength of gravity also depends on the distance between two objects; the closer they are, the stronger the gravitational force.
Isaac Newton concluded that the force of gravity and the forward motion of the planets combined to keep them in orbit around the Sun. The force of gravity pulls the planets towards the Sun, while the forward motion of the planets creates the centrifugal force that counteracts gravity, leading to stable orbits.
The two forces that work together to keep the planets in orbit around the sun are gravity and inertia.
Gravity and inertia
Gravity and inertia.
the planets do not orbit the moon but the moon orbits the planets because of gravity and inertia
Gravity and inertia. The Sun's gravity holds all the planets in orbit with its immense gravity, and the planets have no tendency to change their orbits due to the law of inertia which implies that the planets will stay in their elliptical patterns until a force acts on them to change that status.
Gravity is the force that pulls objects towards each other, such as the sun and planets in our solar system. Inertia is the tendency of objects to resist changes in their motion. Gravity keeps planets in orbit around the sun by balancing the planets' inertia with the force of gravity pulling them towards the sun.