Gravity is like an invisible string that pulls things together, just like when you’re holding on to a swing.
Imagine you have a big ball and a small ball. If you let them go, the big one doesn’t move much, but the small one zooms toward it, just like how you fall down when you jump. That’s gravity working!
What Makes Gravity Work?
Why Things Fall Differently
Big things fall slower than small ones because they’re heavier. It’s like trying to push a heavy shopping cart versus a light toy car, the heavy one moves more slowly.
But if you're on the Moon, gravity is weaker, so you bounce higher when you jump, just like how a ball bounces higher on a trampoline! Gravity is like an invisible string that pulls things together, just like when you’re holding on to a swing.
Imagine you have a big ball and a small ball. If you let them go, the big one doesn’t move much, but the small one zooms toward it, just like how you fall down when you jump. That’s gravity working!
What Makes Gravity Work?
Think of Earth as a giant magnet. Everything on it, like you, your toys, and even your dog, is being pulled toward its center, like a big invisible string.
When you throw a ball up in the air, gravity is like a friend who gently tugs it back down to your hands.
Why Things Fall Differently
Big things fall slower than small ones because they’re heavier. It’s like trying to push a heavy shopping cart versus a light toy car, the heavy one moves more slowly.
But if you're on the Moon, gravity is weaker, so you bounce higher when you jump, just like how a ball bounces higher on a trampoline!
Examples
- An apple falling from a tree is like gravity pulling it down.
- A stretched fabric with marbles on it shows how gravity works in space.
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See also
- How Does Discovery That Changed Physics! Gravity is NOT a Force! Work?
- Do cats always land on their feet?
- How Does Tides: Crash Course Astronomy #8 Work?
- How You'd Look Living on Different Planets - 3D Animation?
- How the tides REALLY work?