gravity is a constant force pulling down on you. jumping doesnt escape that fact.
The Earth pulls down on you, but you pull up on the Earth!
Things thrown upward fall back to the ground due to the force of gravity, which pulls objects towards the Earth's center. As the object rises, its speed decreases until the pull of gravity overcomes the upward force and causes it to fall back down.
When a stone is thrown up in the air, it rises due to the initial force applied to it. However, gravity pulls the stone back down towards the Earth. As the stone loses its upwards momentum and the pull of gravity becomes stronger, it eventually falls back down to the ground.
An example of gravity acting on a moving object is a ball thrown into the air. As the ball moves upwards, gravity acts to pull it back down towards the earth, slowing its vertical motion until it eventually falls back to the ground.
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.
It does. Astronauts on the moon can jump higher than they do on Earth but they still come back down. The moon's gravity is weaker than Earth's because the moon has less mass.
You can pull back on the reins and lean back.
Gravity (the Earth's pull) drags your body back down.
You can jump higher on the surface of the moon because it has weaker gravity compared to Earth. The gravitational pull of the moon is about one-sixth that of Earth, so you can overcome it more easily to jump higher.
It is a 'pull' when you are falling, the gravity 'pulls' you down. But the Air resistance will 'push' you back up, making a force either a push or a pull
It is a 'pull' when you are falling, the gravity 'pulls' you down. But the Air resistance will 'push' you back up, making a force either a push or a pull
Not necessarily, the place you land depends on how far you jump into the hole. Gravity won't pull you to the center, gravity only pulls things down and not sideways.
You could jump much higher and farther because there us less gravity on the moon so it never pulls you down so you can jump higher and farther.
The Earth pulls down on you, but you pull up on the Earth!
Yes, when you high jump on the moon, you would eventually come back down to the moon's surface due to the moon's gravity pulling you back down. The force of gravity on the moon is about one-sixth of that on Earth, so you would experience a slower descent back to the surface compared to on Earth.
No one knows.
due to gravity pull