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Any time you drop something,
it falls down.
But - why? Why do you come back down,
no matter how hard you jump on that trampoline?
When you throw a ball, why does it fall
to the ground instead of flying off into space?
The answer is gravity, but it does
a lot more than pulling things down.
Gravity is an invisible force that
pulls objects towards each other.
In most cases,
when we say "gravity"
we are talking about the earth's gravity,
but anything that has mass has gravity, too.
Yes, even you have gravity!
Of course, you don't have very much gravity.
The more mass something has,
the more gravitational force it has.
Compared to the gravity
of the earth,
any gravitational force that
you have is too weak to notice.
Mass is not the same
as weight.
Mass is a measure of the matter in an object,
and does not change no matter where you go.
On the other hand, weight measures the pull
of gravity on an object, and this can change.
Most places on earth have roughly
the same amount of gravity,
but if you were to leave earth,
the pull of its gravity
would weaken
the farther away you went,
until eventually
you would experience zero-g.
This is because gravity
gets weaker with distance.
There is still gravity in space, because
everything that exists exerts gravitational force,
but the gravitational pull
from something like a person
or even a spaceship is so small
it feels as though you have no weight at all.
If you were to land on another
planet or celestial body,
the pull of gravity would be
different depending on its mass,
and you would not weigh
the same as you did on earth.
On the moon, for example,
gravity is only about 17% of earth's.
This is because the moon
is much less massive than the earth.
A person who weighs 100 pounds
or 45 kilograms on earth
would weigh only 17 pounds
or 7 and a half kilograms on the moon.
On Mars, the same person
would weigh 38 pounds or 17 kilograms.
On Jupiter, they would weigh
253 pounds or 106 kilograms.
Gravity is the weakest of the four
fundamental forces of the universe,
and only gets weaker with distance,
but it is very important for life on Earth.
It is the force that holds us down
to the surface of the planet.
Gravity makes things fall down,
and gives things weight.
It is what holds the Earth together, and keeps
the air we breathe from spinning off into space.
Gravity also holds
our solar system together.
The earth's gravity holds the moon
in orbit around the Earth.
The sun's gravity holds the Earth and all
the other planets in orbit around the sun.
On a larger scale, even the Milky Way
galaxy is held together by gravity.
Scientists believe that a supermassive
black hole sits at the center of the Milky Way,
with its gravity holding all the gas,
dust, stars and systems in place around it.
Black holes have so much mass
in such a small space
that their gravitational pull
is very strong.
They generate such strong gravity
that not even light can escape from them,
and that's why
they look black!
So you see, while gravity
may be an invisible force,
it has a very visible
impact on our lives.