Understanding the Gravitational Constant: Equation, Impact, and Controversy

In summary: It's basically a way of taking measurements and then using those measurements to find the value of a theoretical constant.
  • #1
chis
51
0
I am looking for some clarification on the gravitational constant.
What is the equation that produces it and what does it add to the value of a calculated gravity i.e what would the calculated gravity represent if it was removed from the equation? Also I have read it is a fudge by Newton and it's just accepted to work but has not been bottomed out.
 
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  • #2
It comes from F = GMm/r^2
It's the force between two massive objects, M and m, a distance r apart.

It's interesting because since gravity is such a weak force it is very difficult to measure experimentally - it took 100years after Newton to get an answer. Even now it's only known to an accuracy of 0.01% - billions of times worse than some constants.

Newton didn't use the symbol - in his day equations weren't written like that, he would have just said that the force is proportional to the product of the masses.

The only thing large enough to give a measurable effect in his day was the Earth so he calculated a value of G*M where M is the mass of the earth, since he didn't know the mass of the Earth he couldn't work out a value of G on it's own.
Interestingly the attempts at measuring G were more aimed at getting to the M - so measuring G was really about weighing the Earth,
 
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  • #3
Thanks, but what is the formula to acquire the gravitaional constant not the gravitational forces between two objects?
Please read my original text.

Cheers
Chris
 
  • #4
It's an empirical constant. Measured, not derived.
 
  • #5
I have seen it represented as a number, is this number used in the equation?
 
  • #6
chis said:
I have seen it represented as a number, is this number used in the equation?
It's a physical constant: a number with units. G = approximately 6.67 x 10-11 N m2/kg2.
 
  • #7
Yes the number 6.673 × 10-11 m3 kg-1 s-2 is used in the equation.
It might be possible to calculate it from fundamental constants (c / mu / mass of quarks etc) but we don't have a theory yet for how.

The actual number of course depends on your units, it would be different in lbs/ft/s
 
  • #8
mgb_phys said:
It comes from F = GMm/r^2

chis said:
Thanks, but what is the formula to acquire the gravitaional constant not the gravitational forces between two objects?

Equation as given by mgb_phys, and used in the Cavendish experiment (I personally find this even more amazing than Michelson-Morley): http://www.leydenscience.org/physics/gravitation/cavend.htm
 
  • #9
Without G how inacurate would the equation be? What is G preposed to represent?
 
  • #10
The equation is perfectly accurate (ignoring general relativity effects).
What it says is that the force between two objects is proportional to the product of their masses divided by the distance between them squared

G is just the constant to put the answer in Newtons for an equation in kilograms and metres.
 
  • #11
chis said:
Also I have read it is a fudge by Newton and it's just accepted to work but has not been bottomed out.

Yes, G is a "fudge factor" or "free parameter". The point is to (i) make your theory with as few fudge factors as possible, (ii) make sure the fudge factors can be measured. Newton's theory has only one fudge factor, and it is universal, once you measure it for one system, you know it for all other systems.
 
  • #12
Right the penny may have finally dropped. It's just used to consolidate different measurement units? Did Newton figure thi number out or did he just theorise its exsistance and it was filled in later?
 
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  • #13
It's not just the units - it does contain the fundemantal strength of gravity.

It's like if I told you a metal pipe weighed so much per foot, you would know that a piece twice as long weight twice as much.
So in terms of an equation: weight = k * length
the value of k depends on the units (it would be different for kg/metres and lbs/feet) but it also depends on the metal the pipe is made from (lead would be a different lbs/foot than copper.)

As I said Newton (and everybody for 100years after) couldn't measure the value - it's very small - they could measure the value of "G*Mass_of_earth" because you can get that from the movement of bodies around the Earth, notably the moon.
 
  • #14
It is a constant of proportionality.

It's what makes the answer come out right for any given set of units.

It's arrived at like this:

We know that the froce acting between two masses is given by

[tex]F = \frac{kMm}{d^2}[/tex]

where K is some constant. At first we didn't know what value this constant had. To find out we re-arrange the formula to

[tex]k = \frac{Fd^2}{Mm}[/tex]

Now we take tow known masses (m & M) put them a distance of d apart and then measure the force pulling them together. We then plug these values into the equation, which gives us our constant k. We call this constant "G".

What G works out to be depends on what units we used to measure mass, time and distance.
 
  • #15
The pipe analogy was great I think you have done it. Sorry for being so slow. So G is our best generic assumtion of a unit of gravity?
 
  • #16
Yes - except we have sort-of been lying to you!
Newton's law of gravity isn't really correct.

It's very good for typical calculations of falling balls and orbiting satellites. But close to very heavy objects (like stars) it doesn't quite give you the correct answer.
That's what Einstein did - he wrote a new more complicated theory the gives a more accurate answer.

It doesn't change the value of G (or allow us to calculate it directly) but it does say that the equation above isn't exactly correct for all cases.
It's like having to take into account the bend in the pipe when working out lbs/feet - if the pipe is short the bend is small and you can ignore it, but in some case (if the pipe is long or the object is a black hole) you need to use the more accurate theory.
 
  • #17
Ah did Einstiens refinement include density as a contributing factor?
Is G a graviton?
 
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  • #18
chis said:
Ah did Einstiens refinement include density as a contributing factor?
No, density is already in Newtonian theory. See the section "Differential Form" at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gauss's_law_for_gravitational_fields. In Newton's theory, gravity travels infinitely fast. Einstein's refinement was to make gravity travel at the speed of light.

chis said:
Is G a graviton?
No.
 
  • #19
Doc Al said:
It's an empirical constant. Measured, not derived.

Yeah, by Henry Cavendish in 1798 if I'm not wrong.

Oh, by the way, I watched a video of a MIT Classical Mechanics lecture by professor Walter Lewin, in which he affirmed that "the time it takes an apple to fall is independent of the mass of the Earth".

Is that true? Well, the apple(m) falls due to its gravitational interaction with Earth(M) by F = GMm/r^2, therefore we could apply t(g) = v/g (air resistance is not taken into consideration) to find the time it takes the apple to fall, right? However, as it is a function of "g", the bigger "g" is, the faster the apple will fall, right? But, "g" depends on the mass of the Earth (the mass of the apple is not taken into consideration as it is too small compared to Earth's), as we can see it in g = GM/r^2

So I really did not understand Mr. Lewin's point.

The video link is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PmJV8CHIqFc&feature=SeriesPlayList&p=F688ECB2FF119649&index=1

NOTE: Professor Lewin talks about it by 35:00.
 
  • #20
Je m'appelle said:
Oh, by the way, I watched a video of a MIT Classical Mechanics lecture by professor Walter Lewin, in which he affirmed that "the time it takes an apple to fall is independent of the mass of the Earth".
I didn't review the lecture, but that statement seems false (as you go on to point out).
 
  • #21
Its' independent of the mass of the APPLE = Galileo's famous experiment
 
  • #22
chis said:
Without G how inacurate would the equation be?
Without G the equation wouldn't be just be "inaccurate", it would be completely wrong. It would be dimensionally inconsistent. Meaning if you used it to ask "what is the distance from the Earth to the moon" you would get an answer in kg^(1/2) s m^(-1/2) instead of meters.
 
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  • #23
Your patience is an asset to you and is appreciated, thanks guys.
Chris
 
  • #24
There are three kinds of mass: gravitational source mass ([itex]M_S[/itex]), gravitational response mass ([itex]m_t[/itex]), and inertial mass ([itex]m_I[/itex]). The first two are the two kinds of mass that appear in Newton's gravitation law.

[tex]
F=\frac{M_Sm_t}{r^2}
[/tex]

The third is the kind of mass that appears in Newton's second law of motion.

[tex]
a=\frac{F}{m_I}
[/tex]

As you can see, I have (purposely) omitted G from Newton's gravitational law. However, I believe initiated by the work of Galileo, we eventually developed the tradition of converting gravitational source mass and response mass to inertial mass. However, at least one of the two kinds of gravitational mass must have different units than inertial mass in order for Newton's gravitational law to give units of force. What Galileo discovered was that

[tex]
m_t=c_{tI}m_I
[/tex]

where [itex]c_{tI}[/itex] is some universal constant that converts from the units of inertial mass to gravitational response mass. Also, motivated in part by Kepler, Newton suggested that the roles of [itex]M_S[/itex] and [itex]m_t[/itex] should be interchangeable (due to his third law of motion). So

[tex]
M_S=c_{tI}M_I
[/tex]

Putting this into Newton's gravitational law makes it a universal law in terms of inertial masses, and one finds a constant of proportionality

[tex]
c_{tI}^2\equiv{}G
[/tex]

As has been suggested, G was not able to be determined in Newton's time. What scientists were able to conclude was that G is universal, which is still a big deal. It is a profound statement to say that the amount of stuff is directly proportional to the amound of gravity it produces and also directly proportional to how strongly it responds to gravity. In fact, this is such a profound notion that it eventually led Einstein to propose the gravity isn't even a real force, just a geometrical phenomenon. It should be noted that general relativity could have just as well developed if we never knew the numerical value of G, just as long as we were confident that it was universal.
 
  • #25
Doc Al said:
I didn't review the lecture, but that statement seems false (as you go on to point out).
That statement, by Walter, is absolutely false. Drop an apple on a lesser mass like the Moon and obviously the acceleration would be quite different from earth. He probably made a little slip. I like his videos.
 
  • #26
G is a constant. Whether it carries any deep meaning is subjective: it is possible that G could simply be an outcome of our system of units; if we used different units, it might be that all that really matters is the relation, whereas the constant would simply be 1 --- though if one were to look at it like that, then he/she would also have to consider other constants, in which case, it is not necessary that all constants will be 1 simultaneously; thus, it is noticeably possible that there might be some deep meaning behind them.
 

1. What is the gravitational constant?

The gravitational constant, denoted by the symbol G, is a fundamental physical constant that describes the strength of the gravitational force between two objects with mass. It is an important constant in the field of physics, particularly in the study of gravitation and celestial mechanics.

2. What is the equation for the gravitational constant?

The equation for the gravitational constant is G = F/(m1m2)/r^2, where G is the constant, F is the force of gravity, m1 and m2 are the masses of the two objects, and r is the distance between them.

3. What is the impact of the gravitational constant?

The gravitational constant has a significant impact on our understanding of the universe. It helps us explain the motion of planets, stars, and galaxies, and is essential in the study of gravity and its effects on objects. It also plays a crucial role in various fields such as cosmology, astrophysics, and engineering.

4. Why is there controversy surrounding the gravitational constant?

There is some controversy surrounding the gravitational constant because its precise value has been challenging to determine accurately. Different experiments and measurements have yielded slightly different values, leading to debates and discussions among scientists. Additionally, some theories, such as Einstein's theory of general relativity, suggest that the gravitational constant may vary in different regions of space.

5. How is the gravitational constant measured?

The gravitational constant is typically measured using a torsion balance, which measures the torque between two masses due to the force of gravity. The most precise measurement to date was done by the Cavendish experiment in 1798, and its value has been refined over the years using various methods and technologies.

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