No, gravity affects all objects with mass, not just solids. It also affects liquids and gases.
Gravity is a force that pulls you down to the centre of a planet. If it was zero gravity you wouldn't be pulled down. Earth is the only planet that has gravity that's why you "float" in space. I hope this has helped.
When a hollow plastic ball and a solid metal ball is a dropped in a vacuum and gravity is the only force acting on the balls the balls will fall at the same rate. Being that this is a prediction answer may vary.
The gravity would stay the same. Weight and density has no effect on the gravitation on the object when on earth. Everything is pulled the same.
No, it pulls in whatever direction the item with the gravitational force is away from the object being pulled. So basically, if there were an object(this object will be marked with a A) just floating and out of no where an object with gravity(Object with gravity being marked with B) appeared ABOVE A, object B would pull object A upward.
That can be gravity, electrostatic force, magnetic force, or strong nuclear force. As it's described in the question, the only thing we know for sure is that it's a "mutual force of attraction".
Exact same thing just happened to me, hence the research.
Is gravity a solid? Physical collisions of solid objects is not the only way that forces can act on solid objects.
Only in zero gravity
Motion and mutual gravitational attraction.Another Perspective:Gravity is the only thing required, which is fortunate because it's the only thing there is.
water
The simple answer is, "Gravity". Gravity pulls the wires down just as it pulls everything else down. The wires can only be pulled with a maximum tension, and all the while gravity is pulling down.
a giant meteor was pulled into earths gravity being too big it could only orbit earth
Earth gravity is pulling the moon, that is why it orbits. The only reason the moon doesn't get pulled closer is because it is orbiting to fast to be pulled.
A planetoid about the size of Mars crashed into the early Earth likely pulled out a a Lagrange point by Jupiter's gravity. Then pulled into the Earth by both bodies gravity, in an off-center hit sending debris into space and leaving a small portion in space with the added Earth debris that was pulled together by gravity again into the moon. As it drags along its slow orbit it's slowly being pulled away at about an inch a year because the gravity of Earth isn't supporting it so well (for reasons I won't go into here.) Gravity can only be significantly felt between objects with a very large mass, like the Earth and Moon. Which is why you dont feel a gravitational attraction between you and your computer. The Moon formed when gravity pulled pieces of rock and debris together into one big rock.
The thing is that you can find the gravity gun in Zanzibar but,it only works on PC that sucks!
Saturn is the second largest planet in the Solar System. It does not have a solid surface, therefore one cannot actually feel the gravity on Saturn. However, scientists have measured that the gravity on Saturn is only 92% of Earth's gravity.
Water