Science, asked by karthik607m, 1 year ago

from where the gravity earth gets gravity??​

Answers

Answered by vishalpanwar97
0

Answer:

The first reason is because the Earth is rotating. This means that the gravity of Earth at the equator is 9.789 m/s2, while the force of gravity at the poles is 9.832 m/s2. In other words, you weigh more at the poles than you do at the equator because of this centripetal force, but only slightly more.

Answered by MrEccentric
0
  • Newton's Universal Law of Gravitation: Newton's Universal Gravitational Law states that ''Every particle of matter in the universe attracts every other particle with a force, which is directly proportional to the product of their masses, and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them...''
  • The Universal Gravitational Constant 'G': The Universal Gravitational Constant is equal to the force of attraction between two point masses of 1 kg each kept at a distance of 1 metre apart...
  • The Force of Gravity: If out of the two masses, one is the Earth(or any other planet), then the gravitational force is said to be the Force of Gravity...

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