What are gravitational interactions?

Gravitational interactions are like invisible sticky hands that pull things toward each other.

Imagine you have a big ball and a small ball. If you let them go near each other, the big one will gently pull the small one toward it, just like how your gravity makes you stay on the ground instead of floating away!

Like playing with magnets

You know how magnets can pull paper clips or stick to your fridge? Gravity is kind of like a magnet that's always turned on. It doesn’t need batteries or buttons, it’s just there, pulling everything toward bigger things.

Big things, like Earth, have stronger "sticky hands." That’s why you stay on the ground when you jump, Earth pulls you back down!

Even space has sticky hands

Even in space, where there's no air or ground, gravity still works. The Moon stays around Earth because Earth’s gravity is pulling it, just like how a string keeps a yo-yo from flying away.

So, gravitational interactions are everywhere, helping things stay together, even if you can’t see them!

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Examples

  1. An apple falls from a tree because Earth pulls it down.
  2. The Moon stays around Earth because of gravity.
  3. You feel lighter on the Moon because it has less gravitational pull.

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Categories: Space · gravity· physics· interactions