While it looks like a broken static image, Google Gravity is fully interactive and functional.

When a user loads the page, the familiar Google homepage appears normal for a split second. Then, the search bar, buttons, and logo lose their digital anchoring and crash to the bottom of the screen.

The core idea is brilliantly simple. Mr. Doob used JavaScript and HTML5 to create a perfect replica of the classic Google homepage. However, he then applied the laws of physics to it. When you first visit the page (usually at mrdoob.com/projects/chromeexperiments/google-gravity/ ), it looks completely normal. The magic begins the moment you interact with it. As soon as you click anywhere, the search bar, the Google logo, and all the buttons fall from the top of the screen and "crash" to the bottom in a heap, as if suddenly pulled by an incredibly strong gravitational force.

If you try to run Google Gravity Water and it doesn't work, here is why:

: Developed in 2009 by digital artist Ricardo Cabello, widely known as Mr.doob , this Chrome Experiment used a 2D physics engine (box2d-js) to make the Google UI elements tumble to the bottom of the screen.

Water — Google Gravity

While it looks like a broken static image, Google Gravity is fully interactive and functional.

When a user loads the page, the familiar Google homepage appears normal for a split second. Then, the search bar, buttons, and logo lose their digital anchoring and crash to the bottom of the screen. Google Gravity Water

The core idea is brilliantly simple. Mr. Doob used JavaScript and HTML5 to create a perfect replica of the classic Google homepage. However, he then applied the laws of physics to it. When you first visit the page (usually at mrdoob.com/projects/chromeexperiments/google-gravity/ ), it looks completely normal. The magic begins the moment you interact with it. As soon as you click anywhere, the search bar, the Google logo, and all the buttons fall from the top of the screen and "crash" to the bottom in a heap, as if suddenly pulled by an incredibly strong gravitational force. While it looks like a broken static image,

If you try to run Google Gravity Water and it doesn't work, here is why: The core idea is brilliantly simple

: Developed in 2009 by digital artist Ricardo Cabello, widely known as Mr.doob , this Chrome Experiment used a 2D physics engine (box2d-js) to make the Google UI elements tumble to the bottom of the screen.

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