daniel_i_l said:
It is interesting to note that in 1-D, gravity would never weaken!
yup. one way to imagine this (in our 3-D existence) is with an infinite plane of mass in space (and nothing else except oneself). there would be some gravitational field from that plane of mass, but it would be the same whether you were 10 meters away from it, or a kilometer, or a lightyear. now imagine that this infinite plane of mass is featureless and perfectly smooth in surface appearance (sorta like the surface of that monolith in 2001: A Space Odyssey but extending infintitely in two dimensions). just by looking at it (now we'll pretend there is a sun somewhere illuminating it), you could not tell the difference between if you were 10 meters away from it, or a kilometer, or a lightyear distant.
now, for 2-D, let's imagine an infinite line of charge (or maybe better yet, a cylinder of charge that is infinitely long, but finite diameter). that has a 1/r gravitational field, and as you move away from it, it appears smaller
only in one dimension, how thick it is.
for the point (or better yet, a little sphere) charge in 3-D, it's 1/r^2 and as you move away from it, it appears smaller in two dimensions.
i suppose, if we lived in a 4-D universe (4 spatial dimensions), instead of having these inverse-square laws for E&M, gravitation, power intensity of any radiation, etc., i think we would have inverse-cube laws.