Nothing. Gravity exists in vacuum as well.
Yes, there is still gravity in a vacuum. Gravity is a fundamental force that exists everywhere in the universe, including in a vacuum where there is no air or matter.
Yes. Gravity attracts every speck of mass in the universe to every other one, even though in almost all cases, there's nothing but vacuum between them.
Vacuum itself does not have gravity. In a vacuum, there is an absence of matter and gas particles, so there is no medium for gravity to act upon. Objects in a vacuum are subject to the gravitational pull of nearby massive bodies like planets or stars.
In a vacuum, where there is no air resistance, two objects of different masses will fall at the same rate and hit the ground at the same time. This is due to the acceleration of gravity being the same for all objects in a vacuum, regardless of their mass.
A pendulum can oscillate in a vacuum even in the absence of gravity because the motion of a pendulum is governed by its own momentum and inertia, rather than by external forces such as gravity or air resistance. As long as the initial push sets the pendulum in motion, it will continue oscillating back and forth due to its own energy, even in a vacuum.
Whether or not you float has nothing to do with vacuum. You float because you are too far away from the earth (or other massive objects) for their gravity to have any noticeable effect on you. It just so happens that this occurs in space where natural vacuum may be found.
Yes, there is still gravity in a vacuum. Gravity is a fundamental force that exists everywhere in the universe, including in a vacuum where there is no air or matter.
Yes. Gravity attracts every speck of mass in the universe to every other one, even though in almost all cases, there's nothing but vacuum between them.
Vacuum itself does not have gravity. In a vacuum, there is an absence of matter and gas particles, so there is no medium for gravity to act upon. Objects in a vacuum are subject to the gravitational pull of nearby massive bodies like planets or stars.
No.
In a vacuum, where there is no air resistance, two objects of different masses will fall at the same rate and hit the ground at the same time. This is due to the acceleration of gravity being the same for all objects in a vacuum, regardless of their mass.
A pendulum can oscillate in a vacuum even in the absence of gravity because the motion of a pendulum is governed by its own momentum and inertia, rather than by external forces such as gravity or air resistance. As long as the initial push sets the pendulum in motion, it will continue oscillating back and forth due to its own energy, even in a vacuum.
Gravity Happens was created on 2011-05-19.
This ratio is called the specific gravity.
No - gravity acts across the vacuum of space - this is how the moon affects our tides.
by definition a vacuum is empty. as in nothing. there is nothing in a vacuum. so the answer is, by current knowledge, that nothing happens in a vacuum
In a vacuum with no air resistance, objects of different masses will fall at the same rate and hit the ground at the same time. This is because gravity affects all objects equally regardless of their mass.