correspondence
between two or more varibles
A function.
Cause and Effect
Things may be correlated without causal relationship or conversely. Consider the Modulus function - that is the value of a number without regard to its sign. Over any domain (-a,a), there is a very strict relationship between x and mod(x), but their correlation is 0. Conversely, I expect that there is a good correlation between my age and the number of TV sets in the world. That is not to say that my getting older is producing more TVs or that TV production is causing me to age. Simply that both of them are correlated to a third variable - time. There can be correlation without such a third variable but, offhand, I cannot think of an example.
The exponent of the base is a step to solve the problems now the exponent of the product will also adjust a step to solve the equation but it contains more cooperative need.
correspondence
spatial relationships are the relationships between two or more objects.
The close objects are the more gravity there will be between them.
More mass in the objects increases the strength of the mutual gravitationalforces between them, but more distance between them decreases it.
the larger the objects the more gravity it can potentially have, the closer objects are the more the attraction they have between them.
A less dense object or any other substance will float on a more dense liquid.
Objects of greater mass have more gravitational pull.
It's stronger between objects with more mass, and between objects that are closer together.
The definition of relationship is "the way in which two or more concepts, objects, or people are connected, or the state of being connected". Therefore; a person cannot be in a relationship alone.
an equation that expresses a relationship between two or more quantities
Less distance --> more force.
If the objects are the same distance apart (center to center), then the gravitational force between two less massive objects will be less than the gravitational force between two more massive objects.