gravity

     

Gravitation is a natural phenomenon by which all objects with mass attract each other, an is one of the fundamental forces of physics. In everyday life, gravitation is most commonly thought of as the agency that gives objects weight. It is responsible for keeping the Earth and the other planets in their orbits around the Sun; for keeping the Moon in its orbit around the Earth, for the formation of tides; for convection (by which hot fluids rise); for heating the interiors of forming stars and planets to very high temperatures; and for various other phenomena that we observe. Gravitation is also the reason for the very existence of the Earth, the Sun, and most macroscopic objects in the universe; without it, matter would not have coalesced into these large masses and life, as we know it, would not exist.

Trivia about gravity

  • According to Chuck Jones, whenever possible, this force of nature was to be Wile E. Coyote's greatest enemy
  • This force causes an object to travel 32 feet per second faster for every second that it falls
  • g. Acceleration due to this, varies slightly with latitude since the Earth is not a perfect sphere
  • The general theory of relativity basically deals with this force Newton studied
  • On Earth, it's the major force responsible for the weight of a body
  • (Kelly of the Clue Crew demonstrates with a coffee can & an inclined plane.) A ball of clay inside the can is enough to reposition the can's natural center of this, so the can rolls uphill
  • A free-falling body accelerates at a rate of about 1 g, g coming from this word
  • Your friend didn't "literally fall off the face of the Earth"... unless he can defy this force that keeps him grounded
  • (Jimmy of the Clue Crew does his darndest to topple at an exhibit at the California Science Center.) On the high-wire bike, a weight lowers the rider's center of this, so it's almost impossible to fall! ...Whoa!
  • The point around which a body's weight is evenly balanced is called its center of mass or of this
  • In 1666 it occurred to Newton that apples & the moon might both be subject to this force
  • (Sarah of the Clue Crew shows an animated diagram on the monitor.) The reason why astronauts are taller in space is due to a lessening of this force; the vertebrae separate slightly, allowing for a height increase of 2 inches or more
  • This force is so strong in a black hole that it doesn't even allow light to escape
  • (Sarah of the Clue Crew riding in a Blue Angels jet) On takeoff, for a high-performance climb, pilots can experience six times the force of this
  • Arthur Eddington helped confirm general relativity by showing that this force affects rays of light
  • The 4 basic forces that exist in nature are strong, weak, etectromagnetic & this one
  • It's the weakest of the 4 basic forces, but it's strong enough to keep the moon orbiting the Earth
  • The acceleration of falling objects varies from place to place because of variations in this force
  • Relativity theory assumes that the effect of accelaration on an object equals the effect of this force
  • Stokes' Law governs how fast a particle drops through a liquid as a consequence of this force
  • In black holes this force is so strong that not even light can escape
  • On the surface this force is 2.64 times ours; a 100-pound object would weigh 264 lbs.
  • Isaac Newton published his first mathematical formulation for this fundamental force in 1687
  • You have "receptors" in your ears for this fundamental force, & they get upset when you're weightless
  • Positive geotropism is the effect of this force on plants causing their roots to grow downward
  • Though it holds our planet together, it's actually a much weaker force than electro-magnetism
  • The acceleration of this at the Earth's surface is 9.8 meters per second squared
  • About one-third of U.S. studies aboard the ISS deal with the phenomenon known as zero this
  • Normally, your mass doesn't change, but your weight does, when this force changes
  • Pure water's density is approximately 1 gram per cubic centimeter, & its "specific" this is also 1
  • At the Earth's surface, this force produces acceleration of about 32 feet per second per second
  • The 4 basic forces in physics are the strong nuclear, the weak nuclear, the electromagnetic & this one
  • Isaac Newton found the strength of this depends on 2 things: mass & distance
  • It weighs you down(7)
  • A successful string theory would describe nature's 4 forces: weak, strong, electromagnetism & this one
  • 15th grade physics whizzes know it's the force described by the equation seen here
  • (Sarah of the Clue Crew levitates a ping-pong ball over a hair dryer.) What goes up stays up when the force of air moving up from the hair dryer equals this force pulling down on the ping-pong ball