The force of gravity is directly related to the masses of the two objects it acts between, and inversely related to the square of the distances between them.
The equation is F=-G*m1*m2/r2
On Earth, we know the mass of one of the objects (the Earth) and can approximate the distance between the two objects (the radius of the earth), so this equation simplifies to F=mgh, and only depends on the mass of the object that the Earth's gravitational field is acting on and the height of the object above the earth. Little g is a constant equal to about 9.8 m/s2.
The strength of the forces between ions depends on a few things. It depends on the ions' charges, the atom or ion sizes, and the atom's or ion's atom's electronegativity.
distance - The force decreases as the distance increases
Isaac newton told us that gravitic force depends on the masses and distance apart of objects.
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The product of the masses of the two objects, and the distance between them.
The strength of gravity depends on the value of the universal gravitational constant.The size of the gravitational forces between two objects depends on the productof their masses, and on the distance between their centers.
The strength of the gravitational forces between two objects depends on the product of their masses. In fact, it's directly proportional to the product of their masses.
-- the product of their two masses -- the distance between their centers
The mass of the objects and the distance between them.
The product of the masses of the two objects, and the distance between them.
The masses (both of them), and the distance.
The masses (both of them), and the distance.
The strength of gravity depends on the value of the universal gravitational constant.The size of the gravitational forces between two objects depends on the productof their masses, and on the distance between their centers.
The mass of the objects and the distance between them.
The strength of the gravitational forces between two objects depends on the product of their masses. In fact, it's directly proportional to the product of their masses.
-- the product of their two masses -- the distance between their centers
The mass of the objects and the distance between them.
The forces that arise on account of gravity depend on the masses of the objects being attracted toward each other, and on the distance between their centers.
Gravity can depend on how far apart and how heavy the objects are.
Yes. The forces of gravity between two objects depend on the product of their masses, so it depends on the masses of both objects.
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