How Does Gravity Affect an Astronaut's Weight Near the Moon?

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SUMMARY

The apparent weight of a 78-kg astronaut 5200 km from the center of the Moon can be calculated using Newton's second law and the law of gravitational force. The gravitational force (Fg) is determined by the formula Fg = GM/r², where G is the gravitational constant (6.67 x 10-11 N m²/kg²) and M is the mass of the Moon. When the space vehicle accelerates towards the Moon at 3.2 m/s², the astronaut's apparent weight is directed towards the Moon.

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I really have no idea where to start or how to even do this...

(a) What is the apparent weight of a 78-kg astronaut 5200 km from the center of the Earth's Moon in a space vehicle moving at constant velocity?
(b) is this towards or away from the moon?
(c) What is the magnitude of the apparent weight of a 78 kg astronaut 5200 km from the center of the Earth's Moon in a space vehicle accelerating toward the moon at 3.2 m/s^2?
(d) is this towards or away from the moon?
 
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jfahlgr1 said:
(a) What is the apparent weight of a 78-kg astronaut 5200 km from the center of the Earth's Moon in a space vehicle moving at constant velocity?
(b) is this towards or away from the moon?
(c) What is the magnitude of the apparent weight of a 78 kg astronaut 5200 km from the center of the Earth's Moon in a space vehicle accelerating toward the moon at 3.2 m/s^2?
(d) is this towards or away from the moon?

Hi jfahlgr1! Welcome to PF! :smile:

I don't really understand question (a) … is that the whole question? :confused:

Let's go straight to question (c) …

the apparent weight is the force exerted by the astronaut's feet and the spaceship on each other …

calculate it using Newton's second law of motion, and the law of gravitational force. :smile:
 
First of all you have to know the mass of the Moon first before getting the weight of the astronaut. You use this formula to find Fg:

Fg = [tex]\frac{GM}{r^2}[/tex]

where:
G = gravitational constant (6.67 * 10-11)
M = Mass of the Moon
r = 5,200,000 meters (5200 km)

After you get Fg then you mutiply it from the mass of the astronaut to get its weight.

The direction in question D is is towards the moon because you already said that the vehicle is accelerating towards the moon at 3.2 m/s2.
 

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