Compare Gravity Scales
Help Questions
Middle School Earth and Space Science › Compare Gravity Scales
A class uses a simple model with three interactions:
Local: a 10 kg backpack and a 1 kg textbook on a table.
Solar system: Earth and the Sun.
Galaxy: the Sun and the Milky Way’s center.
Which statement about gravity across scales is supported by the model?
Gravity operates at all scales, but local gravity between small objects is usually much harder to notice than gravity involving very massive objects like the Sun or a galaxy.
Gravity only works where there is air, so it cannot be important for the Sun or the Milky Way.
Gravity in the classroom is real, but gravity in space is not because space is empty.
Because the backpack is physically larger than the textbook, it must have more gravity no matter what their masses are.
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local interactions to vast cosmic structures. Gravity is a universal force that acts everywhere in the universe, pulling all objects with mass toward each other. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects involved and the distance between them; larger masses and shorter distances result in stronger pulls. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses of the objects and the scale or distance involved in the scenario. A common misconception is that gravity only affects objects locally on Earth, but in reality, it operates over immense distances as well. Gravity organizes systems ranging from moons orbiting planets to entire galaxies holding billions of stars in formation. Understanding this helps explain phenomena like tides, planetary orbits, and the structure of the universe itself.
A teacher shows a simple model list of objects with very different masses: a pebble, Earth, the Sun, and the Milky Way galaxy. Students discuss gravity at the local scale (pebble near Earth), the solar system scale (Earth–Sun), and the galaxy scale (Sun–Milky Way center).
Which claim is incorrect?
More massive objects generally have a stronger gravitational influence than less massive objects when compared at similar distances.
At different scales, gravity can produce different noticeable effects (like falling locally and orbiting at larger scales) without stopping or turning off.
Gravity operates at all scales, from a pebble near Earth to stars moving in the Milky Way.
Because the Milky Way is so large, gravity inside the galaxy must be zero; otherwise everything would crash together immediately.
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local interactions to vast cosmic structures. Gravity is a universal force that acts everywhere in the universe, pulling all objects with mass toward each other. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects involved and the distance between them; larger masses and shorter distances result in stronger pulls. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses of the objects and the scale or distance involved in the scenario. A common misconception is that gravity only affects objects locally on Earth, but in reality, it operates over immense distances as well. Gravity organizes systems ranging from moons orbiting planets to entire galaxies holding billions of stars in formation. Understanding this helps explain phenomena like tides, planetary orbits, and the structure of the universe itself.
A model shows two scales of gravitational interactions.
Local scale: An astronaut holds a wrench next to a small toolbox inside a space station.
Galaxy scale: The Sun and billions of other stars orbit the Milky Way’s center.
Which claim is incorrect because it limits gravity to small scales only?
Gravity exists only between objects that are close enough to touch; otherwise it stops.
Gravity can act across the Milky Way and helps keep stars in orbit around the galaxy’s center.
Gravity affects objects in a space station, even though the effects may be hard to notice compared with other forces.
Mass matters: more massive objects generally have stronger gravitational influence than less massive ones at the same distance.
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local interactions to vast cosmic structures. Gravity is a universal force that acts everywhere in the universe, pulling all objects with mass toward each other. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects involved and the distance between them; larger masses and shorter distances result in stronger pulls. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses of the objects and the scale or distance involved in the scenario. A common misconception is that gravity only affects objects locally on Earth, but in reality, it operates over immense distances as well. Gravity organizes systems ranging from moons orbiting planets to entire galaxies holding billions of stars in formation. Understanding this helps explain phenomena like tides, planetary orbits, and the structure of the universe itself.
A student is comparing gravity at different scales using two models.
Model 1 (object–object): A small asteroid passes near a large planet and changes direction.
Model 2 (Milky Way): The Sun moves in a curved path around the galaxy’s center.
How does gravity’s effect change with scale, based on these models?
Only the distance matters, so the large planet and the galaxy center have the same effect if the distances are equal, even if their masses differ.
Gravity operates at all scales, but which object has the stronger influence depends on both mass and distance in each situation.
Gravity is always stronger at the larger scale, so the galaxy’s pull is always stronger than any planet’s pull in any situation.
Gravity disappears at large scales, so the Sun’s curved path must be caused by something other than gravity.
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local interactions to vast cosmic structures. Gravity is a universal force that acts everywhere in the universe, pulling all objects with mass toward each other. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects involved and the distance between them; larger masses and shorter distances result in stronger pulls. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses of the objects and the scale or distance involved in the scenario. A common misconception is that gravity only affects objects locally on Earth, but in reality, it operates over immense distances as well. Gravity organizes systems ranging from moons orbiting planets to entire galaxies holding billions of stars in formation. Understanding this helps explain phenomena like tides, planetary orbits, and the structure of the universe itself.
A student reads two explanations for why stars in the Milky Way move in orbits.
Explanation 1: “Stars orbit because gravity from the galaxy’s mass pulls them toward the center, similar to how gravity keeps planets orbiting the Sun.”
Explanation 2: “Stars orbit because gravity only works at small distances, so something else must push stars around at the galaxy scale.”
Choose the explanation that best fits the scale difference described (local/solar system vs galaxy).
Explanation 2, because gravity stops working beyond the solar system.
Neither explanation, because all motion in space is random and not related to gravity.
Explanation 2, because galaxies are static and do not need gravity to explain motion.
Explanation 1, because gravity operates at all scales and can guide orbits in both the solar system and the Milky Way.
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local interactions to vast cosmic structures. Gravity is a universal force that acts everywhere in the universe, pulling all objects with mass toward each other. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects involved and the distance between them; larger masses and shorter distances result in stronger pulls. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses of the objects and the scale or distance involved in the scenario. A common misconception is that gravity only affects objects locally on Earth, but in reality, it operates over immense distances as well. Gravity organizes systems ranging from moons orbiting planets to entire galaxies holding billions of stars in formation. Understanding this helps explain phenomena like tides, planetary orbits, and the structure of the universe itself.
A model compares gravitational interactions at two scales.
Local scale: Earth pulls on a dropped ball near Earth’s surface.
Galaxy scale: The Milky Way’s gravity influences the motion of the Sun.
Which statement about where gravity is strongest is most supported by the model idea that mass matters and scale changes effects (not existence)?
Gravity is strongest wherever the objects are the largest in size, even if they have low mass.
Gravity is automatically strongest at the galaxy scale because “bigger scale” always means “stronger force.”
Gravity is stronger only at the human scale because that is where we can feel it directly.
Gravity can be strong in both cases, but the strongest influence in each interaction comes from the more massive object involved (Earth locally; the galaxy’s mass at the galaxy scale).
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local interactions to vast cosmic structures. Gravity is a universal force that acts everywhere in the universe, pulling all objects with mass toward each other. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects involved and the distance between them; larger masses and shorter distances result in stronger pulls. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses of the objects and the scale or distance involved in the scenario. A common misconception is that gravity only affects objects locally on Earth, but in reality, it operates over immense distances as well. Gravity organizes systems ranging from moons orbiting planets to entire galaxies holding billions of stars in formation. Understanding this helps explain phenomena like tides, planetary orbits, and the structure of the universe itself.
A student compares two scale models of gravity.
Model A (local): The Moon pulls on Earth, causing ocean tides.
Model B (galaxy): Many stars, including the Sun, orbit the center of the Milky Way.
Which interaction best shows large-scale gravity (galaxy scale) rather than local gravity?
The Sun’s pull keeping Earth in orbit around the Sun.
The Moon’s pull on Earth that changes the ocean’s water level.
A person’s weight caused by Earth’s pull at the surface.
The combined gravity of the Milky Way keeping the Sun and other stars orbiting the galaxy’s center.
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local interactions to vast cosmic structures. Gravity is a universal force that acts everywhere in the universe, pulling all objects with mass toward each other. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects involved and the distance between them; larger masses and shorter distances result in stronger pulls. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses of the objects and the scale or distance involved in the scenario. A common misconception is that gravity only affects objects locally on Earth, but in reality, it operates over immense distances as well. Gravity organizes systems ranging from moons orbiting planets to entire galaxies holding billions of stars in formation. Understanding this helps explain phenomena like tides, planetary orbits, and the structure of the universe itself.
A student uses two scale models to explain gravity.
Model A (solar system scale): The Sun keeps planets in orbit.
Model B (galaxy scale): The Milky Way’s gravity keeps the Sun and other stars orbiting around the galaxy’s center.
Which statement about gravity across these two scales is supported by the models? (No calculations.)
Gravity works in the solar system but stops working at the galaxy scale because space is too large
Gravity operates at both solar system and galaxy scales, and larger total mass can create noticeable gravity at large scales
Gravity is stronger in smaller systems, so the Sun cannot be affected by the Milky Way’s gravity
Gravity only affects objects that are close enough to touch or nearly touch
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local objects to entire galaxies. Gravity is a universal force that acts between all objects with mass, no matter where they are in the universe. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects and the distance between them; larger masses and smaller distances result in stronger gravity. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses involved and the scale of the system, such as local, solar system, or galactic. A common misconception is that gravity only works locally on Earth or between nearby objects, but it actually extends infinitely. In general, gravity organizes systems by keeping moons in orbit around planets, planets around stars, and stars within galaxies. Understanding this helps us see how gravity shapes the structure of the universe from small to large scales.
A set of three interactions is described:
- Interaction A (local/object–object): a small asteroid passing near a spacecraft.
- Interaction B (solar system): the Sun pulling on a comet.
- Interaction C (galaxy): the Milky Way’s center pulling on the Sun.
Which interaction best shows large-scale gravity (gravity influencing motion across very large distances), while still recognizing that gravity operates at all scales?
Interaction B, because gravity cannot act across a whole galaxy
Interaction A, because gravity only works between small nearby objects
Interaction C, because the galaxy’s total mass can influence the Sun’s motion across huge distances
Interaction A, because the spacecraft is closer to the asteroid than the Sun is to the comet
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local objects to entire galaxies. Gravity is a universal force that acts between all objects with mass, no matter where they are in the universe. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects and the distance between them; larger masses and smaller distances result in stronger gravity. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses involved and the scale of the system, such as local, solar system, or galactic. A common misconception is that gravity only works locally on Earth or between nearby objects, but it actually extends infinitely. In general, gravity organizes systems by keeping moons in orbit around planets, planets around stars, and stars within galaxies. Understanding this helps us see how gravity shapes the structure of the universe from small to large scales.
A student compares two models:
Model X (solar system): The Sun’s gravity keeps Earth in orbit.
Model Y (galaxy): The Milky Way’s gravity keeps the Sun moving in an orbit around the galaxy’s center.
The student asks: “If we zoom out from the solar system to the galaxy, what happens to gravity?”
Which prediction best matches the models while keeping local vs large-scale gravity distinct?
Gravity stays the same strength everywhere, so scale does not change its effects
Gravity still operates, but at larger scales the combined mass of many objects can matter, so large-scale gravity can guide the motion of stars
Gravity disappears when you zoom out, because gravity is only a local force
Gravity becomes stronger only because the galaxy is larger in size, even if it had the same mass
Explanation
The core skill is comparing gravity across different scales, from local objects to entire galaxies. Gravity is a universal force that acts between all objects with mass, no matter where they are in the universe. The strength of gravitational influence depends on the masses of the objects and the distance between them; larger masses and smaller distances result in stronger gravity. To check gravitational effects, identify the masses involved and the scale of the system, such as local, solar system, or galactic. A common misconception is that gravity only works locally on Earth or between nearby objects, but it actually extends infinitely. In general, gravity organizes systems by keeping moons in orbit around planets, planets around stars, and stars within galaxies. Understanding this helps us see how gravity shapes the structure of the universe from small to large scales.