Gravitation, or
gravity, is one of the four
fundamental interactions of nature (along with the
strong force,
electromagnetism and the
weak force), in which
objects with
mass attract one another.
[1] In everyday life, gravitation is most familiar as the agent that gives
weight to objects with mass and causes them to fall to the ground when dropped. Gravitation causes dispersed matter to coalesce, thus accounting for the existence of the
Earth, the
Sun, and most of the macroscopic objects in the
universe. Gravitation is responsible for keeping the Earth and the other planets in their
orbits around the Sun; for keeping the
Moon in its orbit around the Earth; for the formation of
tides; for natural
convection, by which fluid flow occurs under the influence of a density gradient and gravity; for heating the interiors of forming stars and planets to very high temperatures; and for various other phenomena observed on Earth.
Modern
physics describes gravitation using the
general theory of relativity, in which gravitation is a consequence of the curvature of
spacetime which governs the motion of inertial objects. The simpler
Newton's law of universal gravitation provides an accurate approximation for most calculations.