Gravity Doesn't Make Any Sense

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In summary, the conversation discusses the effects of gravity on different planets and how it affects physical strength and movement. The participants question whether an alien from a planet with much stronger gravity would be able to move faster on Earth because of the lower gravity. They also discuss the strange movements of humans on the moon due to the difference in gravity and wonder if the alien would experience the same on Earth. The general consensus is that the acceleration of gravity remains the same regardless of the planet, so the alien's movements would appear normal but may be more powerful due to their higher physical strength.
  • #1
johnnya
12
0
Hi all,

First of all nice forum. Secondly, I'm new here and I wasn't sure where
to start this thread, but seeing that it's mostly about gravity, I guess
this section is suitable. I apologize if it's not.

Anyway, I have this question that's been screwing up my mind.

Imagine that there were aliens that lived on a planet very much like
ours. Only difference is that their planet is much bigger
than ours and has much more gravity. Let's say that their
gravity is 10 times that of earth. So their physical
strength will obviously be much greater since their
bodies have to resist all that gravity.

Now let's say one of them comes here...

Since a human acts 'weird' (floats a little etc...) when he's on
the moon, will the alien act the same way on our planet, since
his homeplanet has much stronger gravity?

According to physics that's what will happen I suppose.

But that doesn't make any sense because that would mean
that physical strength will effect the gravity that's pulling you,
right?

So in other words, if (hypothetically speaking) a human reaches
the same strength of that alien, he will start to jump more, float
a little on our planet as well!?

Because that's sounds unbelievable to me.

To continue with this little argument, gravity pulls every bit of matter
in your body, so it's like a force holding you. When you put a human
in a place where gravity is very little or non existent, that force is
gone, so how come he isn't able to move faster?? how come we don't
move faster on the moon?

To make it even more clear, that alien we were talking about earlier,
wouldn't he be able to move 10 times faster on our planet since the
gravity is 10 times less than the gravity of his planet?

Looking forward to your answers.

Cheers.
 
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  • #2
johnnya said:
Hi all,

First of all nice forum. Secondly, I'm new here and I wasn't sure where
to start this thread, but seeing that it's mostly about gravity, I guess
this section is suitable. I apologize if it's not.

Anyway, I have this question that's been screwing up my mind.

Imagine that there were aliens that lived on a planet very much like
ours. Only difference is that their planet is much bigger
than ours and has much more gravity. Let's say that their
gravity is 10 times that of earth. So their physical
strength will obviously be much greater since their
bodies have to resist all that gravity.

Now let's say one of them comes here...

Since a human acts 'weird' (floats a little etc...) when he's on
the moon, will the alien act the same way on our planet, since
his homeplanet has much stronger gravity?

According to physics that's what will happen I suppose.

But that doesn't make any sense because that would mean
that physical strength will effect the gravity that's pulling you,
right?

So in other words, if (hypothetically speaking) a human reaches
the same strength of that alien, he will start to jump more, float
a little on our planet as well!?

Because that's sounds unbelievable to me.

To continue with this little argument, gravity pulls every bit of matter
in your body, so it's like a force holding you. When you put a human
in a place where gravity is very little or non existent, that force is
gone, so how come he isn't able to move faster?? how come we don't
move faster on the moon?

To make it even more clear, that alien we were talking about earlier,
wouldn't he be able to move 10 times faster on our planet since the
gravity is 10 times less than the gravity of his planet?

Looking forward to your answers.

Cheers.

Welcome to the PF. Think of gravity as an acceleration. The acceleration here on Earth is 1/10 of that on your alien friend's world, but it is still the same when he's here and doing things. The acceleration is the same for you and for him, so if you both jump a meter off the ground, you will both have the same motion. He may be able to jump 10 meters high, but his motion will look natural, the same as if you threw something 10 meters high and it fell back down.

The acceleration of gravity is much less on the moon, so that's why the astronauts looked so funny bouncing around. You and the alien and the Apollo astronauts all would bounce around the same on the moon. And you can't move faster horizontally on the moon even though it has a smaller acceleration due to gravity -- gravity acts in the vertical direction. You can jumpp higher, but that doesn't help you run faster, for the most part.

Does that make more sense?
 
  • #3
Hi man,

berkeman said:
The acceleration is the same for you and for him, so if you both jump a meter off the ground, you will both have the same motion. He may be able to jump 10 meters high,

So his physical capabilities will be much better than ours right?

(on earth)

If on average humans can jump aprox 2 feet high, he could jump aprox 20 feet?
If the average deadlift is 200 kg, he would lift aprox 2000 kg?



berkeman said:
The acceleration of gravity is much less on the moon, so that's why the astronauts looked so funny bouncing around. You and the alien and the Apollo astronauts all would bounce around the same on the moon. And you can't move faster horizontally on the moon even though it has a smaller acceleration due to gravity -- gravity acts in the vertical direction. You can jumpp higher, but that doesn't help you run faster, for the most part.

BUT could he (the alien) move faster on earth? or will he float and bounce around on earth
just like we do on the moon? (since the Earth in terms of gravity
is like the moon compared to his planet
)


EDIT: In other words, we move funny on the moon because it has 1/6th of Earth's gravity, so will he move funny
on our world which has 1/10th of his planet's gravity? Or will he move normally but much faster?

That's the main question that I was trying to get
an answer to.
 
Last edited:
  • #4
johnnya said:
BUT could he (the alien) move faster on earth? or will he float and bounce around on earth
just like we do on the moon? (since the Earth in terms of gravity
is like the moon compared to his planet
)


That's the main question that I was trying to get
an answer to.

No, he most likely would not be faster. In fact, he'd probably look like a turtle -- short, squat, strong muscles. He would not bounce around -- his motion would look like all the rest of the stuff here living with 1g.
 
  • #5
berkeman said:
No, he most likely would not be faster. In fact, he'd probably look like a turtle -- short, squat, strong muscles. He would not bounce around -- his motion would look like all the rest of the stuff here living with 1g.


Pls note that I was picturing this alien to move just as fast as we do
on Earth in his world.

You're thinking about how he probably would be if he was raised
on a planet like that.

Imagine he was like us. Walking upright, moving the same way we
do, etc...

What I can't understand is...

If he moves fast as us on his world then why wouldn't he be
able to move faster and easier on our planet that has
much less gravity?

If we went to Mars for example, will our sprint records increase
since the gravity is weaker?

Cheers. ;)
 
  • #6
When we run, for the most part we are not working against gravity. If you could bound more like a gazelle, then you might be able to go faster, but that would take a different anatomy, more than a smaller gravity.

The extra strength of your 10x alien would mostly be to support them vertically. So yes, they would be able to lift more than us here on Earth, but that doesn't translate into horizontal speed necessarily. If they could bound like a gazelle, then maybe they would be a bit faster than us here.
 
  • #7
I see. Thanks Berkeman ;)
 
  • #8
Since he's a normal human but 10x stronger, I'm sure he would be able to move faster.

He wouldn't be 10x faster, though. Not even close. A limitation of how fast we run is not so much our strength, but the actual geometry of our legs. We're just not "geared" to run fast.

As berkeman said though, the alien would not be built like us. He would be built to work on his planet, not ours, and hence he probably wouldn't be faster than us. If we went to Mars, I doubt we would be faster than on earth. Maybe we would, but certainly we would not be as fast as a human who's had some time (many generations) to evolve for Martian conditions.

Again, we're "geared" for our planet, for our environment. What works here won't work as well somewhere else.
 

1. Why do objects fall at the same rate due to gravity?

This is because the force of gravity is proportional to the mass of an object. So, even though objects may have different masses, they all experience the same force of gravity and thus fall at the same rate.

2. How does gravity work?

Gravity is a force that is created by the presence of mass in an object. The larger the mass, the greater the gravitational force. This force attracts all objects towards each other and is what keeps planets in orbit around the sun and objects on Earth from floating away.

3. Why do we feel weightless in space if there is still gravity?

In space, there is still gravity present, but it is much weaker due to the larger distances between objects. This means that objects in space are still attracted to each other, but the force is not strong enough to keep them in place. This gives the sensation of weightlessness.

4. Can gravity be explained by other theories besides Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation?

Yes, there are other theories such as Einstein's Theory of General Relativity which explains gravity as the warping of space and time by massive objects. However, Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation is still widely used as it accurately predicts the behavior of gravity in most situations.

5. What would happen if gravity suddenly disappeared?

If gravity suddenly disappeared, objects would no longer be attracted to each other and would no longer have weight. This would cause chaos in the universe as objects that were once in orbit around each other would be flung off into space. Life on Earth would also cease to exist without the pull of gravity holding us to the surface.

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