gravitational force
0 sources
gravitational force
Summary
gravitational force is a physical phenomenon[1]. It draws 49 Wikipedia views per month (physical_phenomenon category, ranking #89 of 138).[2]
Key Facts
- gravitational force's instance of is recorded as physical phenomenon[3].
- gravitational force's subclass of is recorded as force[4].
- gravitational force's opposite of is recorded as non-gravitational force[5].
- gravitational force's facet of is recorded as gravity[6].
- gravitational force's different from is recorded as gravitational acceleration[7].
- gravitational force's different from is recorded as gravity[8].
- gravitational force's studied by is recorded as Newton's law of universal gravitation[9].
- gravitational force's ISQ dimension is recorded as \mathsf{L} \mathsf{M} \mathsf{T}^{-2}[10].
- gravitational force's World of Physics ID is recorded as GravitationalForce[11].
- gravitational force's World of Physics ID is recorded as CubeGravitationalForce[12].
- gravitational force's World of Physics ID is recorded as OctahedronGravitationalForce[13].
- gravitational force's World of Physics ID is recorded as PolyhedronGravitationalForce[14].
- gravitational force's World of Physics ID is recorded as TetrahedronGravitationalForce[15].
- gravitational force's World of Physics ID is recorded as ParallelepipedGravitationalForce[16].
- gravitational force's World of Physics ID is recorded as SphereGravitationalForce[17].
- gravitational force's World of Physics ID is recorded as EllipsoidGravitationalForce[18].
- gravitational force's Wolfram Language quantity ID is recorded as GravitationalForce[19].
- gravitational force's quantity symbol is recorded as \boldsymbol{F}_{\rm g}[20].
Why It Matters
gravitational force draws 49 Wikipedia views per month (physical_phenomenon category, ranking #89 of 138).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 9 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21]