Question:

Where does gravity come from?

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How does it form, where does it originate?

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  1. No one knows for sure but everything originated from the Big Bang singularity.


  2. Gravity is a property of matter.

    The more mass an object has, the more gravity it has.

  3. Gravity is a scalar potential force emanating from the zero point energy field. The zero point energy field vibrates higher than anything known to date according to some specialists in the 'taboo' field.

    We all know the idea, that any larger mass will have more gravity than a smaller mass.

    And yet the question is why? Mass is matter, and matter can be energy as well. So if we see both different scales/sizes of matter, we are seeing two different scales/sizes of energy. One having more energy than the other. Energy is accumulating more gravity in volumes. It is demanding the presence of gravity more than the lesser. Working that energy back to the point of origin...we see a connection, perhaps of energy to gravity.

    I have also heard that vibration is related to gravity and that the higher frequency you go, the less gravity seems to be in full function. It dissipates at very extremely high frequencies, above gamma....and close to the plank frequency. (10^42 or so oscillations).


  4. Gravity is a force caused by all objects.  Even you have a gravitational force (although pretty much minuscule).  Gravity is considered a natural phenomenon (wikipedia), noone knows exactly how it originates, however the larger the mass of the object (planet, moon, etc) the larger force of gravity has on another object (example gravity on moon is much smaller than earth).

  5. Gravity fairies flap their wings and make gluotrons that push masses closer together.

    As long as you have omegasigron equilibrium, it's pretty straightforward.  But if the oersted limiting condition isn't met, they can go into felinsys.

    Here's a more through description of how it works:

    http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;...

  6. Wow...deep...has to do with Matter David, but I am not sure I am the one who can answer this...but I tried.

  7. According to current theory, so far as I understand it anyway, gravity is not a thing as such.  What happens, is that the presence of mass (ie objects that weigh something) causes spacetime to distort.  We can't see this distortion, because spacetime is 4-dimensional, and we can only really perceive three of them.  But, basically, objects like to travel in straight lines.  When the space they're travelling through is 'bent', they appear to curve even though they're still travelling straight.

    Think of it this way - imagine two flat ants standing on the equator of a big ball, both facing the same way perpendicular to the line they're standing on.  To them, the surface is completely flat, even though someone not on the ball can see otherwise.  Now, these two ants decide to walk in a straight line in the direction they're facing.  They'll find that they get closer together as they get towards the pole, even though they think they're travelling in straight lines.  To them, it seems like something is pulling them together.  That's what gravity is.

  8. According to the newest theory, each body (each atom) emits gravitrons (small particles that carry out gravity). when the gravitrons emitted by an body reaches some other body (that also emits gravitrons) they attract eachother like 2 magnets.

    the gravitrons emitted by the first body are absorbed by the second one, and the ones emitted by the second one are absorbed by the first one..... that's what equlibrates this thing.

    so the larger the mass, the more the atoms, the powerful the gravity.

  9. What is gravity in the first place?

    Gravity is the bending of space time, this bending is very similar to placing an object on a stretched elastic sheet which resembles the fabric of space.

    When you place the object it causes the space (like the sheet of elastic fabric) around it to bend causing objects passing near it to just take the curved path, as this is the shortest distance between two points in curved space.

    This is what gravity actually is and this is why heavy objects like the sun, the planets,.. etc pull other bodies towards them.

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