Physics, asked by gaurav0192, 4 months ago

why gravity is not a force? explain in brief​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

gravity is not a force between masses. Instead gravity is an effect of the warping of space and time in the presence of mass. Without a force acting upon it, an object will move in a straight line. ... This explains why all objects fall at the same rate.

Explanation:

it's my pleasure to help you.

please mark me as a brainliest.

Answered by ItzCandyCrushZ
14

\huge\underline\mathrm\pink{⟹Answer}

 \huge \rm \pink { ➥ } The answer is gravity: an invisible force that pulls objects toward each other. Earth's gravity is what keeps you on the ground and what makes things fall. ... Earth's gravity comes from all its mass. All its mass makes a combined gravitational pull on all the mass in your body.Gravity is most accurately described by the general theory of relativity (proposed by Albert Einstein in 1915), which describes gravity not as a force, but as a consequence of masses moving along geodesic lines in a curved spacetime caused by the uneven distribution of mass.

By @ItzCandyCrushZ♡~

Similar questions