The factors that affect the way gravity acts on an object include the mass of the object and the distance between the object and the source of gravity (such as the Earth). Objects with more mass experience a stronger gravitational force, while objects that are farther apart experience a weaker gravitational force.
Erosion is the act in which an object moves fluid out of its way.
An objects weight is evenly distributed around its center of gravity or center of mass. Imagine you attach a string to some random point on an object and then let the object hang while holding onto the string. It happens that the center of gravity of the object will always be directly below the point where the string is attached to the object. In fact, this is a good method by which to manually determine the center of gravity of an object. Another way to think about it is this. If you were to apply a force to an object at some random point, in general, not only would the force cause the object to accelerate but the force would also tend to cause the object to rotate. However if you apply the force at the object's center of mass, the object would not tend to rotate in any way, it would only accelerate in the direction of the force. For more information go to the Wikipedia article about > center of mass <
The force of gravity (or acceleration) affects weight but not mass. An object's mass does not change - it is the physical composition of the object. Weight increases as the force of gravity increases and decreases in the same way.
The factors that affect the way gravity acts on objects include the mass of the objects and the distance between them. The larger the mass of an object, the stronger its gravitational pull. Similarly, the closer two objects are to each other, the stronger the gravitational attraction between them.
Electrons are affected by gravity in the same way as any other object with mass. Gravity causes electrons to be pulled towards the center of the Earth, just like it does with all other objects. However, the effect of gravity on electrons is very small compared to other forces that act on them, such as electromagnetic forces.
wind resistance, and gravity, mass does not in any way contribute to how an object falls.
actually the same way it effects the dynamic object. The "gravity" that exhibits the dynamic object appears different often because there are more factors involved- to put it generally. Of course this answer does not really answer your question though, or does it?
Erosion is the act in which an object moves fluid out of its way.
actually the same way it effects the dynamic object. The "gravity" that exhibits the dynamic object appears different often because there are more factors involved- to put it generally. Of course this answer does not really answer your question though, or does it?
An objects weight is evenly distributed around its center of gravity or center of mass. Imagine you attach a string to some random point on an object and then let the object hang while holding onto the string. It happens that the center of gravity of the object will always be directly below the point where the string is attached to the object. In fact, this is a good method by which to manually determine the center of gravity of an object. Another way to think about it is this. If you were to apply a force to an object at some random point, in general, not only would the force cause the object to accelerate but the force would also tend to cause the object to rotate. However if you apply the force at the object's center of mass, the object would not tend to rotate in any way, it would only accelerate in the direction of the force. For more information go to the Wikipedia article about > center of mass <
The size of a rugby player does not affect gravity in any way.
The force of gravity (or acceleration) affects weight but not mass. An object's mass does not change - it is the physical composition of the object. Weight increases as the force of gravity increases and decreases in the same way.
friction and gravity
We know that gravity, magnetic and electricforces or fields act across distance in a way that only the lines of force impinge on an affected object.
The factors that affect the way gravity acts on objects include the mass of the objects and the distance between them. The larger the mass of an object, the stronger its gravitational pull. Similarly, the closer two objects are to each other, the stronger the gravitational attraction between them.
Acceleration does not effect gravity. It is rather the other way round. Gravity can affect the rate of acceleration.
Electrons are affected by gravity in the same way as any other object with mass. Gravity causes electrons to be pulled towards the center of the Earth, just like it does with all other objects. However, the effect of gravity on electrons is very small compared to other forces that act on them, such as electromagnetic forces.