Gravity is a fundamental force that causes all objects with mass to be attracted to one another. It is the weakest of the fundamental forces but dominates at the macroscopic scale, being responsible for phenomena like planetary orbits and ocean tides. Gravity guides plant growth and fluid circulation in organisms. It caused the initial matter in the universe to coalesce into stars and galaxies. General relativity describes gravity as the curvature of spacetime rather than a force, while Newton's law of universal gravitation approximates it as an attractive force proportional to masses and inverse to the square of distance. Current research seeks a theory reconciling gravity and quantum mechanics.