Mass=gravity. If you eliminated all the matter in the universe, and just put in two bowling balls, they would be attracted towards each other by their gravity, not magnetism.
2007-03-01 02:03:16
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answer #1
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answered by xooxcable 5
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Gravity is the force that glues the universe together, as soon as a body has any mass gravity starts pulling it toward other bodies. This is how the cosmic dust that was evenly dispersed through the universe less than a second after the big bang was finally clumped up into the galaxies.
There is a great book called "The Fabric of the Cosmos" that explains it all in relatively simple language, but I couldn't begin to paraphrase!
2007-02-28 23:47:34
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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the attraction of bodies in space is a result of gravitational pull, not magnetism. Magnetism is what makes all compass needles point north (on earth anyway)
2007-03-01 06:42:44
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answer #3
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answered by mcdonaldcj 6
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Gravitational pull. Gravity is the weakest force, but it also works over long distances. Magnetism does not work over the huge distances of space.
2007-03-01 00:02:16
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answer #4
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answered by bldudas 4
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Only gravitational pull. Space without any gravitational force can not influence a magnet.
2007-02-28 23:42:59
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answer #5
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answered by J.SWAMY I ఇ జ స్వామి 7
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The tension using gravity is at as quickly as proportional to the upward push in the mass of the physique, which will or is probably no longer concerning to its length. Double the mass, double the gravitational tension. Triple the mass, triple the stress, etc. it fairly is a linear courting. Acceleration isn't the be conscious for this function.
2016-12-14 08:03:09
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answer #6
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answered by girardot 4
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Gravity is the answer, but it's not gravitational pull. Gravity is warped space time pushing the objects together. Just like objects are pushed to the earths surface by warped space.
2007-02-28 23:49:00
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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It's gravity. One of the major things in physics is to find a way to unify the four forces - graviational, electromagnetic, strong, and weak - but we're not there yet.
2007-02-28 23:55:01
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answer #8
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answered by eri 7
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Im going to say gravitational pull, but thats what i learned n physics so yeah......maybe a little of both, when you find out, post it.... :)
2007-03-01 02:04:44
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answer #9
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answered by texcjb 2
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Gravity.
The two are not even vaguely comparable forces.
2007-02-28 23:56:00
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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