Science, asked by Aryanoberoy, 1 year ago

what is the derivation of gravitational force

Answers

Answered by Greatandglorious
2
The universal law of gravitation states that: Every object in the universe pulls every other object with a force which is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.

Aryanoberoy: this is not derivation
Answered by ꜱɴᴏᴡyǫᴜᴇᴇɴ
189

Explanation:

Explanation:

\huge\star{\underline{\mathtt{\red{A}\pink{N}\green{S}\blue{W}\purple{E}\orange{R}}}}

<font color= "green">✧ What is the Gravitational Force?

<font color= "red">✒The universe has a lot of forces, a lot of pushes and pulls. We're always pushing or pulling something, even if only the ground. But it turns out that in physics, there are really only four fundamental forces from which everything else is derived: the strong force, the weak force, the electromagnetic force, and the gravitational force.

<font color= "blue">☞︎︎︎ Additional information

<font color= "black">☞︎︎︎In the equation:

<font color= "Magenta">F is the force of gravity (measured in Newtons, N)

G is the gravitational constant of the universe and is always the same number

M is the mass of one object (measured in kilograms, kg)

m is the mass of the other object (measured in kilograms, kg)

r is the distance those objects are apart (measured in meters, m)

So if you know how massive two objects are and how far they are apart, you can figure out the force between them.

<font color= "Orange"> ♡ Hope it helps!! ♡

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