Gravitational Force between two bodies when Distance is zero

In summary: However, when calculating the gravitational force between two bodies, we treat them as point masses and the distance between them is not zero. Therefore, using the formula F = G m1m2/d2, we can see that when d = 0, the force would be infinite. In summary, when the distance between two bodies is zero, the gravitational force between them would be infinite if we treat them as point masses. However, in reality, the force would be zero as the bodies would behave as a single object and not exert any force on themselves.
  • #1
nvijayprakash
2
0
What will be the Gravitaional force between two bodies when the distance between them is zero
e.g., If we place a ring around a sphere, the center of gravity of the two bodies coincide and thus the distance of separation is zero.

F = G m1m2\d2
d = 0 ,F = Infinity
 
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  • #2
nvijayprakash said:
What will be the Gravitaional force between two bodies when the distance between them is zero
e.g., If we place a ring around a sphere, the center of gravity of the two bodies coincide and thus the distance of separation is zero.

F = G m1m2\d2
d = 0 ,F = Infinity

This formula is for point masses with d > 0 and non intersecting spherical masses
 
  • #3
You can't just stick the distance between the centers of mass into that formula. It applies to each element of mass; you'll have to integrate. In this case the net gravitational force will be zero, not infinity.
 
  • #4
Well, the answer is (As far as i think)

This equation applies to "point like" bodies
if two (POINT LIKE) bodies have zero distance between them that means they are located at the same location.
So they will behave as single object and this unified body (which is again POINT LIKE) will not exert any gravitational force on itself!
 
  • #5
Well when we place the ring and sphere as you said that time

(i) Ring is outside the sphere so sphere can be treated as point like object with its mass concentrated at the centre (Let us say it S)
(ii) Now break the ring into elementary parts each elementary part will be at a distance of r (radius of ring) from S.
(iii) now each elementary part will exert a force on S. So the net force on S will be Zero
(iv) But the elementary parts of ring will not have gravitational force in all directions. So if the ring is not rigid it will try to shrink[otherwise restoring forces in the ring will balance the gravitational force on each elementary ring and it will remain intact]
 
  • #6
x/0 is undefined, not infinity.
 
  • #7
You are missing the point, denisv. Newton's law of gravitation applies only to point masses. To compute the force between two non-point masses you will have to apply Newton's laws to all pairs of points in the two bodies. In general, this is a rather nasty double volume integral:

[tex]\mathbf F = - \int_{V_1} \int_{V_2}
\frac{G\rho(\mathbf x_1)\rho(\mathbf x_2)}
{||\mathbf x_1-\mathbf x_2||^3}(\mathbf x_1-\mathbf x_2)
d\mathbf x_2 d\mathbf x_1
[/tex]

In this particular case, the force is zero. Everything cancels.
 
  • #8
What you say in no way changes that x/0 is undefined, which is what I was pointing out.
 
  • #9
denisv said:
What you say in no way changes that x/0 is undefined, which is what I was pointing out.
No one said that you are wrong, just that you miss the point. What would the difference between "infinity" and "undefined" by anyway for physical questions?
 
  • #10
arpan251089 said:
This equation applies to "point like" bodies
if two (POINT LIKE) bodies have zero distance between them that means they are located at the same location.
So they will behave as single object and this unified body (which is again POINT LIKE) will not exert any gravitational force on itself!
Objects within a unified body (such as the Earth) do indeed exert gravitational force on each other i.e. every atom in the Earth affects every other atom in the Earth.
 

1. What is the gravitational force between two bodies when the distance between them is zero?

The gravitational force between two bodies when the distance between them is zero is infinite. This means that the two bodies will experience an extremely strong attraction towards each other.

2. Why does the gravitational force become infinite when the distance between two bodies is zero?

According to Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation, the force of gravity between two objects is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. When the distance between two objects is zero, the denominator becomes zero and the force becomes infinite.

3. Is it possible for two bodies to have a distance of zero between them?

No, it is not physically possible for two bodies to have a distance of zero between them. This would mean that the two bodies are occupying the same space, which is not possible according to the laws of physics.

4. How does the gravitational force change as the distance between two bodies decreases?

The gravitational force between two bodies decreases as the distance between them increases. This is because the inverse square law states that the force is inversely proportional to the square of the distance. Therefore, as the distance decreases, the force of gravity increases exponentially.

5. Can the gravitational force between two bodies ever be completely zero?

Yes, the gravitational force between two bodies can be zero if the distance between them is infinite. This means that the two bodies are so far apart that the force of gravity between them becomes negligible.

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