To provide you with additional information about how we collect and use your personal data, we’ve recently updated our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. Please review these pages now, as they apply to your continued use of our website.
Gravity is a fundamental force in physics that attracts objects with mass towards each other. It gives weight to physical objects and is responsible for the natural phenomenon of things falling to the ground. Described by Isaac Newton's law of universal gravitation and later refined by Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity, gravity plays a crucial role in shaping the structure of the universe, from the orbits of planets around stars to the formation of galaxies. It is a force that acts over a distance and is proportional to the masses of the objects involved, influencing everything from the tides on Earth to the bending of light in the presence of massive celestial bodies.