No gravity at center of earth= no pressure?

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of net gravity and pressure at the center of a sphere, specifically the Earth. While the gravitational force at the center is zero, the layers of Earth above still exert a crushing weight, resulting in pressure. The value of gravity increases as you move away from the center, and each layer of Earth must support the layers above it. The conversation also delves into the role of individual atoms and electrons at the center and the effect of rotation on pressure.
  • #71
In this spherical chamber we now place an instrument which can measure gravitational forces. Are we saying that the instrument would read zero gravity?

(Someone was mentioning something about atmosphere. A planet needs to have a certain amount of gravity in order to maintain an atmosphere. Otherwise it literally will float off into space.)
 
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  • #72
Malibuguy said:
If there were a hollow center in the earth, then an object placed in the center would experience the gravity of the surrounding mass of the earth. Gravity would be pulling from all around. Sort of like someone pulling on your head and your feet and pulling on your right arm and your left arm.

Well, this certainly validates DocAl's concern about the semantics being clearer by just saying the strength of the gravity field at the center of the Earth is zero.

The net force of gravity on each molecule of your body would be zero. So it would not be like someone pulling on your head, feet, arms, etc. Every piece of your body is feeling the same net force - zero.

You can't draw a diagram with your body surrounded by lines of force going outward. Instead, your diagram would have a whole bunch of lines all through your body going all kinds of different directions. Except every single of those lines you drew would cancel each other out, essentially giving you a gravity field with a strength of zero.
 
  • #73
You can't draw a diagram with your body surrounded by lines of force going outward

You have to be very careful with analogies here.

Which body would you rather inhabit?

One that has zero forces applied?

or

One that has zero net force applied by two wild horses pulling your arms equally in opposite directions?

The 'feeling' effect only applies to point masses. All others would be rent asunder or crushed.
 
  • #74
Studiot said:
The resultant would certainly be zero, but I still contend there would be attraction from every point mass in the non hollowed out part of the Earth.
No, Newton showed in his famous shell theorem that the field everywhere within the hollowed out shell is exactly zero. There will be gravity from every piece of mass outside the hollow, but it adds up to zero everywhere within the hollow.
 
  • #75
Malibuguy said:
In this spherical chamber we now place an instrument which can measure gravitational forces. Are we saying that the instrument would read zero gravity?
Yes.
 
  • #76
Studiot said:
You have to be very careful with analogies here.

Which body would you rather inhabit?

One that has zero forces applied?

or

One that has zero net force applied by two wild horses pulling your arms equally in opposite directions?

The 'feeling' effect only applies to point masses. All others would be rent asunder or crushed.
A body is made up of point masses. If the gravitational force on every point mass is exactly zero, there is no crushing or tension exerted on the body. Your analogy would work if gravity pulled one way on one arm and another way on the other arm--but it doesn't pull at all on either arm! Or any other part.
 
  • #77
A body is made up of point masses. If the gravitational force on every point mass is exactly zero, there is no crushing or tension exerted on the body. Your analogy would work if gravity pulled one way on one arm and another way on the other arm--but it doesn't pull at all on either arm! Or any other part.

But this is plainly impossible.

We have agreed that there is only one point where the gravity resultant is zero.

So your assembly of point masses (even as few as two) is impossible.
 
  • #78
Studiot said:
But this is plainly impossible.

We have agreed that there is only one point where the gravity resultant is zero.
No, within a hollowed out cavity at the center of a spherically symmetric mass all points have zero gravity. Any body placed within that cavity would feel zero force from the mass outside.
 
  • #79
No, within a hollowed out cavity at the center of a spherically symmetric mass all points have zero gravity. Any body placed within that cavity would feel zero force from the mass outside.

You are quite right there, I was getting confused between solid Earth's and hollow ones.
Thank you for pointing that out.
 
  • #80
Then how about a region right next to the center? Would the gravity it
Feels be very smaller or larger or the same as on the surface of the earth
 
  • #81
Malibuguy said:
Then how about a region right next to the center? Would the gravity it
Feels be very smaller or larger or the same as on the surface of the earth
If that nearby point is within the hollow cavity, gravity is still zero as discussed. If within the solid earth, then much smaller than the strength of gravity on the Earth's surface.
 
  • #82
"The gravity it Feels"?
How is this object going to feel the gravity? It can measure it, though.
1. The object inside a hollow spherical cavity at the dead centre. (Strong enough etc.)
By observing its motion relative to the sides of the spherical hole it's in: it will not observe acceleration in any direction. If it were 'suspended' on a string from a point on the inner surface of the space, the string would be slack.

2. The object is somewhere near the centre of a solid Earth (in a rigid cavity).
It will weigh mgx/r where x is the distance away from the centre and r is the Earth's radius

3. The object is in a thin tube through the centre of an otherwise solid Earth.
It will observe that it exhibits simple harmonic motion - demonstrating that the force towards the centre is proportional to its distance away from the centre.
 
  • #83
So then gravity gets larger as you go away from the center of the earth? When you hit the surface gravity gets smaller as you go away from surface.
 
  • #84
This idea that gravity gets smaller when you approach the center of the Earth until it goes to zero makes no sense at all.

Do you weigh more or less when you are on top of mount Everest cOmpared to the bottom of the grand canyon?
 
  • #85
Malibuguy said:
This idea that gravity gets smaller when you approach the center of the Earth until it goes to zero makes no sense at all.

Do you weigh more or less when you are on top of mount Everest cOmpared to the bottom of the grand canyon?

This is just not a matter for argument. The sums tell you the whole story. I sometimes wonder why people who don't actually 'know' about stuff like this have such definite opinions.
The top of Mount Everest is not the same as an Earth with that much bigger radius! If you Were on the surface of a bigger planer of the same density then you Would weigh more. If you were on the surface of a smaller planet you would weigh less. When you are down a hole, the whole of the 'shell' above you makes no contribution to your weight at all. Weight is proportional to distance from the centre - until you reach the surface.

Clearly, when you leave the surface, that well known Inverse Square Law kicks in and your weight drops accordingly.
 
  • #86
It's not just the size it's really the density that determines gravitational force. You could have a large planet made out of a low density material and it's gravity would be much smaller than a very small planet made out if say plutonium a very dense material. The
Smaller planet would have a greater gravitational pull.

But the idea that gravity gets smaller once you move from the surface in either direction (towards space or towards the center) doesn't make sense. Gravity pulls toward the center of a mass. If you are beneath the surface it makes sense for gravity to pull the same or more. Not less
 
  • #87
Dear Sophiecentaur,

if you weigh yourself on the top of Mount Everest, not leaving the surface of the earth, guess what! you would weigh a little less that at sea level.
 
  • #88
Malibuguy said:
But the idea that gravity gets smaller once you move from the surface in either direction (towards space or towards the center) doesn't make sense.
So if you were to move an object thousands of miles into space, you think the gravitational pull would be the same?
Gravity pulls toward the center of a mass. If you are beneath the surface it makes sense for gravity to pull the same or more. Not less
As far as what happens when you go below the surface, you actually need to do the calculation. For the simplified case of a uniform density spherical planet, the gravitational field varies linearly from 0 at the center to its full value at the surface. (And I hope it's obvious that as you keep going above the surface, the gravitational field gets smaller.)
 
  • #89
A summary of what I've seen posted.

Although gravity is zero at the center of the earth, pressure will be greatest at the center of the Earth unless there is some solid shell surrounding the center of the Earth that is supporting some or all of the weight outside that shell, in which case the pressure inside the shell could be anything.

If there is a shell supporting all the weight outside the shell, and the inside of the shell is a vacuum, then depending on the Earth's mass distribution (such as a uniform sphere, or a sphere made of continuous uniform spherical shells), there would be no gravity at any point within that hollow shell.

If an object were placed inside inside the hollow shell with zero gravity, then the object would create it's own gravitation field. I'm not sure about interaction between the object and the mass outside the shell, other than the object's gravitational field would increase the pressure on the shell.
 
  • #90
Is the core of the Earth less dense than the outer layers? if the core is less dense then the gravity field would be less. If the core were more dense then the gravity field would be greater. If the same density then the same.

If there was a person who was placed inbetween two large but symmetrically opposing g forces they would not move . But they would experience a greater field of gravitation compared to being weightless in outer space far away form any masses.

Gravity does not cancel itself out to zero.

so if you are in the middle of the Earth you experience a different g field than in the middle of space with no masses around you.
 
  • #91
Malibuguy said:
But the idea that gravity gets smaller once you move from the surface in either direction (towards space or towards the center) doesn't make sense. Gravity pulls toward the center of a mass. If you are beneath the surface it makes sense for gravity to pull the same or more. Not less

It makes perfect sense if you look at the Earth's gravitational field as the sum of the gravitational field of each little piece of the Earth, which it actually is.

Saying gravity pulls towards the center of mass is a simplified generality. It only literally applies if the mass you're talking about is a perfect sphere.

When you start talking about real planets, the force of gravity will always point close to the center of the Earth, regardless of where you are, but not necessarily towards the exact center of the Earth because the mass of the Earth isn't distributed in a perfect sphere (which is one reason why geostationary satellites require constant stationkeeping to keep them in their proper location relative to the Earth; why a sun-synchronous orbit is possible; why satellites in a Molniya orbit always have inclinations of 63.4 degrees, and so on).
 
  • #92
We know that gravity decreases the farther one moved from the center of the mass.
If we move into the substance of the mass, some say it gets weaker.
But if the mass were very small and very dense, so that the center and the surface were very close together, if we follow the idea that the center is zero, how could you have such a high degree of gravity go to zero in such a small movement inward while the force would be quite strong and extend quite far from the surface outswards into space?
 
  • #93
Look, the issue here is about WEIGHT. From time you start digging at the surface until you get all the way to the center of the earth, your WEIGHT is lessening. Weight is caused by gravitational attraction in a net direction. In the core you have equal amounts of gravity pulling every direction, so there is no net force to cause the effect of Weight. You ARE still within a gravitational field and would experience effects such as Time Dilation just like you would anywhere else on the earth.

But the idea that gravity gets smaller once you move from the surface in either direction (towards space or towards the center) doesn't make sense. Gravity pulls toward the center of a mass. If you are beneath the surface it makes sense for gravity to pull the same or more. Not less

Gravity pulls towards the center of mass of an object, yes, but that is a result of the additive gravitational force from everything that makes up that object. As you get UNDER the ground you now have the gravity of the layers above you pulling you opposite of the ones below you. This reduces your weight, but does not reduce or increase the gravity.

This idea that gravity gets smaller when you approach the center of the Earth until it goes to zero makes no sense at all.

Do you weigh more or less when you are on top of mount Everest cOmpared to the bottom of the grand canyon?

The gravity does not get smaller as you approach the center, but your weight does.
 
  • #94
rcgldr said:
A summary of what I've seen posted.

Although gravity is zero at the center of the earth, pressure will be greatest at the center of the Earth unless there is some solid shell surrounding the center of the Earth that is supporting some or all of the weight outside that shell, in which case the pressure inside the shell could be anything.

If there is a shell supporting all the weight outside the shell, and the inside of the shell is a vacuum, then depending on the Earth's mass distribution (such as a uniform sphere, or a sphere made of continuous uniform spherical shells), there would be no gravity at any point within that hollow shell.

If an object were placed inside inside the hollow shell with zero gravity, then the object would create it's own gravitation field. I'm not sure about interaction between the object and the mass outside the shell, other than the object's gravitational field would increase the pressure on the shell.

Gravity is produced by mass, yes? Gravity pulls towards the mass, yes?. If gravity is pulling you one way and gravity is pulling the other way , you might get stretched a little or compressed.

Being surrounded by mass cannot mean that gravity no longer exists. Wherever there is mass gravity exists.
 
  • #95
Malibuguy said:
Gravity is produced by mass, yes? Gravity pulls towards the mass, yes?. If gravity is pulling you one way and gravity is pulling the other way , you might get stretched a little or compressed.

Being surrounded by mass cannot mean that gravity no longer exists. Wherever there is mass gravity exists.

Inside a perfectly symmetrical sphere, no matter how much you increase the gravity of the sphere, you will never experience a net force in any direction. The increase in attraction of your hand towards the closer side of the sphere is perfectly counteracted by there being MORE matter on the other side of your hand. The gravity equals out in both directions. (This is what is meant by "cancels out", not that the gravity simply dissapears.)
 
  • #96
As has been said, the shell theory explains rather nicely how gravity inside a uniform shell is zero. That means as you go down you can ignore the gravitational forces of all of the mass further away from the center of the Earth than you are. You are effectively on a smaller planet. Now even though the force of gravity goes down the pressure goes up. No matter what depth you are at you have to support all of the weight above you. So pressure goes up, but it goes up slower as you go deeper.

Now to make matters worse the Earth is not of uniform density. The core is much denser that the mantle. As a result the force of gravity at first goes up as you approach the center of the Earth. It will continue to slowly rise for the first half of your trip to the center until you hit the outer core/mantle boundary. There the acceleration due to gravity would be about 10.8 m/s^2.

ETA: I almost forgot, here is a Wikipedia article on the shell theory:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shell_theorem" [Broken]
 
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  • #97
@ malibu guy: Now suppose I go into the Earth a little bit. So now I have some Earth above my head and some below. You might ask well the mass above my head is closer than the mass on the farther side of the Earth so it should be stronger. But in your field of view you see a smaller section that is closer, but the mass far away you see r^2 more of it because of surface area of a sphere.
and the field falls of as 1/r^2, so the r^2 perfectly cancels. This may not answer your question but might help you understand Gauss's law. When we use Gauss law for E fields and gravity we only consider the mass or charge enclosed to add to our field in symmetric cases.
Gauss's law is pretty deep and elegant
 
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  • #98
And I think another interesting question that should be asked is let's say I take an atomic clock to the center of the Earth in a hollow cavity. Will this clock tick the same as a clock way out in the vast emptiness of space where the field is zero. I think gravitational time dilation is related to the gravitational potential and not the field. Will my clock tick the same in a place where the field cancels to zero or where it is zero because nothing is there.
 
  • #99
Ok so I did a little more probing about the composition of the Earth. Scientist believe that core of the Earth is made out of molten iron which is at very high temperature thousands of degrees C and under very intense pressure. Pressure is force per surface area. The volume of the core is only 1/8 the volume of the Earth But the core accounts for 1/3 the mass.

The mantle comprises 7/8 of the volume of the Earth and 2/3 the mass.

The core is obviously much more dense than the mantle.

If there were zero gravity in the center of the earth, why is the core so much more dense than the mantle ?

Why did the most dense elements find their way into the core rather than stay in the mantle? Or near the surface where gravity is supposedly greatest according to the notion that gravity keeps getting smaller the further away from Earth surface either inward or outward.

Geologists say that the least dense materials are found on the Earth's surface.
 
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  • #100
suppose a heavy rock is in free-fall towards Earth . what is harder to stop a heavy rock or a lighter object. Maybe that's why the denser elements ended up in the core. Not sure tho.
I am not sure how planets form but if they were in some liquid or plasma state, the heavier elements might punch through the surface because they have more momentum and end up in the core. Maybe.
 
  • #101
Of the four forces: electromagnetism , strong forces, weak forces and gravity - don't most physicists who have at least a phd believe that gravity is the most poorly understood?
 
  • #102
We have general relativity and Newtonian gravity, but yes there is a lot more research to due on gravity. And we don't have a Quantum theory for gravity yet.
 
  • #103
Malibuguy said:
The mantle comprises 7/8 of the volume of the Earth and 2/3 the mass.

The core is obviously much more dense than the mantle.

If there were zero gravity in the center of the earth, why is the core so much more dense than the mantle ?

The heaviest stuff doesn't end up where gravity is biggest, but at the lowest point.
 
  • #104
cragar said:
And I think another interesting question that should be asked is let's say I take an atomic clock to the center of the Earth in a hollow cavity. Will this clock tick the same as a clock way out in the vast emptiness of space where the field is zero. I think gravitational time dilation is related to the gravitational potential and not the field. Will my clock tick the same in a place where the field cancels to zero or where it is zero because nothing is there.

Your clock would have greater time dilation than both the surface of the Earth and deep space.
 
  • #105
Malibuguy said:
If there were zero gravity in the center of the earth, why is the core so much more dense than the mantle ?

Why did the most dense elements find their way into the core rather than stay in the mantle? Or near the surface where gravity is supposedly greatest according to the notion that gravity keeps getting smaller the further away from Earth surface either inward or outward.

Geologists say that the least dense materials are found on the Earth's surface.

Because the denser materials sank when the Earth was molten still. The gravity isn't zero at the center of the earth.
 
<h2>1. What is the concept of "no gravity at the center of the earth"? </h2><p>The concept of "no gravity at the center of the earth" refers to the idea that at the exact center of the earth, there is no gravitational force acting on an object. This is because the mass of the earth is evenly distributed around the center, resulting in a net gravitational force of zero.</p><h2>2. Does this mean there is no pressure at the center of the earth? </h2><p>Yes, since pressure is caused by the weight of a column of material above a certain point, and there is no gravitational force at the center of the earth, there is also no pressure.</p><h2>3. How does this affect our understanding of the earth's interior? </h2><p>This concept does not significantly impact our understanding of the earth's interior, as it is still influenced by other factors such as temperature, density, and the behavior of materials under extreme pressure.</p><h2>4. Can we ever reach the center of the earth where there is no gravity? </h2><p>No, it is not possible for humans to reach the exact center of the earth. The deepest we have ever drilled is about 12 kilometers, which is only a fraction of the earth's total radius of 6,371 kilometers.</p><h2>5. Are there any other places in the universe where there is "no gravity"? </h2><p>There are other places in the universe where the gravitational force is very weak or negligible, such as in space between planets and stars. However, there is always some level of gravity present in these areas, as it is a fundamental force of the universe.</p>

1. What is the concept of "no gravity at the center of the earth"?

The concept of "no gravity at the center of the earth" refers to the idea that at the exact center of the earth, there is no gravitational force acting on an object. This is because the mass of the earth is evenly distributed around the center, resulting in a net gravitational force of zero.

2. Does this mean there is no pressure at the center of the earth?

Yes, since pressure is caused by the weight of a column of material above a certain point, and there is no gravitational force at the center of the earth, there is also no pressure.

3. How does this affect our understanding of the earth's interior?

This concept does not significantly impact our understanding of the earth's interior, as it is still influenced by other factors such as temperature, density, and the behavior of materials under extreme pressure.

4. Can we ever reach the center of the earth where there is no gravity?

No, it is not possible for humans to reach the exact center of the earth. The deepest we have ever drilled is about 12 kilometers, which is only a fraction of the earth's total radius of 6,371 kilometers.

5. Are there any other places in the universe where there is "no gravity"?

There are other places in the universe where the gravitational force is very weak or negligible, such as in space between planets and stars. However, there is always some level of gravity present in these areas, as it is a fundamental force of the universe.

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