Physics, asked by defa32430, 20 hours ago

is gravity stronger than gravitational force if yes then 1) if we take gravitational force between sun and jupiter but lets take jupiter in place of earth and force of gravity between earth and sun where earth is at its place then is gravitation is stronger than gravity ? please ans honestly because i am not finding it anywhere​

Answers

Answered by pallarohith777
1

Answer:

Newton’s laws of motion show that objects at rest will stay at rest and those in motion will continue moving uniformly in a straight line unless acted upon by a force. Thus, it is the straight line that defines the most natural state of motion. But the planets move in ellipses, not straight lines; therefore, some force must be bending their paths. That force, Newton proposed, was gravity.

Answered by shaliniammusujatha
1

Explanation:

Multiply Newton’s gravitational constant times the massive Jupiter time is the mass of the Earth and divide the product by the distance between the two planets. That will give you the gravitational force between the two planets. If you cut the radius, that is the distance between the two planets, in half, then the gravitational attraction is also cut in half.

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