How does gravity work, and why do things fall towards the Earth?

Gravity is like an invisible hug that pulls things toward each other, including you and the Earth.

Imagine you have a big ball (like a giant bouncy ball) and a small ball (like a marble). If you let them go, they roll together. That’s because the bigger ball has more pull than the smaller one. The Earth is like that big ball, it has so much pull that everything around it, like you, your toys, or even clouds, gets pulled toward it.

Like a Bungee Cord

Think of gravity as a bungee cord. If you jump off a platform with a bungee cord, the cord pulls you back up. But if you’re on Earth and you drop something, say, a toy car, there’s no bungee cord to pull it up. Instead, the Earth’s pull is so strong that the car just zooms down toward the ground.

Even when you jump, the Earth doesn’t move much, it's like trying to push a mountain with your hands. But you do feel the pull, and that’s why you come back down!

So gravity is like an invisible bungee cord, always pulling things together, especially toward the Earth. Gravity is like an invisible hug that pulls things toward each other, including you and the Earth.

Imagine you have a big ball (like a giant bouncy ball) and a small ball (like a marble). If you let them go, they roll together. That’s because the bigger ball has more pull than the smaller one. The Earth is like that big ball, it has so much pull that everything around it, like you, your toys, or even clouds, gets pulled toward it.

Like a Bungee Cord

Think of gravity as a bungee cord. If you jump off a platform with a bungee cord, the cord pulls you back up. But if you’re on Earth and you drop something, say, a toy car, there’s no bungee cord to pull it up. Instead, the Earth’s pull is so strong that the car just zooms down toward the ground.

Even when you jump, the Earth doesn’t move much, it's like trying to push a mountain with your hands. But you do feel the pull, and that’s why you come back down!

So gravity is like an invisible bungee cord, always pulling things together, especially toward the Earth.

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Examples

  1. A ball drops to the ground when you let it go because Earth pulls it down.
  2. If you jump, you come back down because of gravity.
  3. Apples fall from trees due to Earth's pull.

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Categories: Physics · gravity· earth· science basics