I hear It's the reason the earth isn't expanding away from the sun much, much faster than it already is.
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This has to do with Newton's laws of gravitation. The person who answered before me is wrong, it has nothing to do with density and all to do with mass. The force of gravity depends on the distance from the object and the mass of the object that is being measured.
Fg=G(m1m2/r^2)
Fg stands for the force
G is tw gravitational constant
M1 is mass 1 and m2 is mass 2
R is the distance away from the object
So from this formula you can see that the larger the mass of the object the stronger that force due to gravity
Fg=G(m1m2/r^2)
Fg stands for the force
G is tw gravitational constant
M1 is mass 1 and m2 is mass 2
R is the distance away from the object
So from this formula you can see that the larger the mass of the object the stronger that force due to gravity
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Gravity depend on distance and mass. The larger the mass the more gravity is effecting on the objects.......
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F = GMm/r*2
As the distance from celestial body decreases (r) the force (F) increases because the distance is in the denominator of the fraction.
As the distance from celestial body decreases (r) the force (F) increases because the distance is in the denominator of the fraction.
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the more mass something has the stronger it's gravity, it's as simple as that
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Because they are more dense and have greater mass.