In our solar system it would be the sun. But there are much more massive objects beyond our solar sytem that would have a higher pull - the more massive an object is the higher its gravitational pull. a black hole has a huge gravitational pull, so strong that light cannot escape.
The biggest object in the solar system is the sun, and the smallest is Pluto
Jupiter is the biggest in our Solar System. Outside, the object is changing almost every day.
Asteroids, meteors, planetesimals (Like Pluto), natural satellites (moons), and dust are part of the Solar system that are not planets.
At any given distance, the object with the greatest mass also has the greatest gravitational force. That's the Sun. The Sun also has the largest surface gravity.
The gravitational force of the sun is strongest for the reason that the sun is the most massive. Gravitational force is proportional to mass; the higher the mass, the stronger the gravity. The sun has over a thousand times the mass of the next most massive object in the solar system (Jupiter).
because the sun is the biggest object in the solar system and that means the gravitational pull is greater meaning that the planets orbit it.
The biggest object in the solar system is the sun, and the smallest is Pluto
Yes, a pulley system is an example of gravitational potential energy. When you lift an object using a pulley system, you are storing potential energy in the object due to its position relative to the Earth's gravitational field.
the sun
The Sun and Jupiter.
Jupiter is the biggest in our Solar System. Outside, the object is changing almost every day.
Yes
Asteroids, meteors, planetesimals (Like Pluto), natural satellites (moons), and dust are part of the Solar system that are not planets.
mass
The sun has the majority of the mass in the solar system. Gravitational attraction varies directly as the magnitude of the mass. The sun therefore has the greatest gravitational effect in the solar system.
The sun is the largest object and the only star in the solar system.
Gravitational energy already IS gravitational energy; what exactly do you want to convert? With a see-saw, or a similar lever, or a system of ropes, you can transfer gravitational energy from one object to another.