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4 answers

There is no threshold. A body's gravitational pull is directly proportional to its mass, and every body that has mass (including you, your pencil, and your computer) exerts a gravitational pull on every other body, however slight. The pull doesn't just "turn on" at a certain critical mass; it gradually gets greater and greater as the object packs on more mass.

2007-12-31 05:02:57 · answer #1 · answered by RickB 7 · 1 0

specific you do. Even atoms have gravitational pull. Gravity average nevertheless is fairly very vulnerable. once you chug a lager your muscle groups are overcoming the completed gravitation pull of the earth to develop the beer.

2016-11-27 00:25:44 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

The mass would have to great enough to overcome the strong forces, weak forces, and the electromagnetic forces. Since nuclear forces have a very small range, it is likely that you would only have to overcome the electromagnetic forces.

2007-12-31 04:11:58 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 2 0

The center of the Earth has one little lonely atom . Ther is nothing in that atom that has a gravity pull.
Hence Gravity force does not exist as a Pull.
I t was Einstein that straingthned that out . He indicated that Gravity is a pressure bearring down on Mass as a function of the deformation of Space. NO PULL.

2007-12-31 04:11:47 · answer #4 · answered by goring 6 · 0 2

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