Galactic Rotation, Outboard Mass Included?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers on the calculation of mass in the context of galactic rotation, specifically addressing whether mass outside a given radius must be included in these calculations. Participants explore the implications of including or ignoring outboard mass when determining the mass necessary for an object to maintain its orbit based on circular velocity and radius. The conversation touches on theoretical and conceptual aspects of gravitational forces in different mass distributions.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • One participant asserts that using circular velocity and radius allows for the calculation of mass inside the orbit, but questions arise regarding the necessity of including outboard mass, which could affect the accuracy of this calculation.
  • Another participant explains that in a spherically symmetric case, potential outside a spherical shell can be ignored, but this does not hold for axially symmetric discs, where exterior mass must be included in calculations.
  • A later reply emphasizes that deriving mass distribution from velocity curves requires iterative adjustments, as the potential must be calculated numerically due to the complexity of the mass distribution.
  • One participant challenges the notion that including outboard mass renders Newtonian calculations irrelevant, suggesting that Newton's laws still apply but may only provide a lower limit for mass.
  • Another participant discusses the gravitational field as a scalar field that can also be treated as a vector field, explaining how gravitational vectors behave differently in spherical and cylindrical mass distributions compared to a disk.
  • There is a contention regarding whether the gravitational vectors from a disk can be ignored for objects inside a hollow ring, with some arguing that they result in a net zero vector while others disagree.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the necessity of including outboard mass in calculations of mass based on circular velocity. Some argue that it must be included, while others maintain that it can be ignored under certain conditions. The discussion remains unresolved, with multiple competing perspectives present.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight limitations in the assumptions made regarding mass distributions, particularly in non-spherical geometries, and the implications for applying Newtonian mechanics in these contexts. There are unresolved mathematical steps regarding the relationship between orbital velocity and mass inside a non-symmetric distribution.

v4theory
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I thought I understood how to calculate mass based on Newton vis a vis circular velocity and radius. If I know the circular velocity and the radius of an orbiting object I can compute the mass inside the orbit.

In effect the circular velocity at radius causes an outward vector that must be resisted by a specific mass inside the radius in order for an object to orbit at that radius.

Most of what I've been studying about galactic rotation agrees with what I think I understand. However many sites claim that symetrical disk outboard mass (outside the radius) must be included...that outboard mass causes a second (gravitational) vector outward. (symetrical sphere outside the radius can be ignored).

The problem I'm having is that if we assume that I calculate for the unknown mass inboard by the circular velocity and radius and there is no outside of radius mass then end of story case closed I have correctly solved for the unknown mass inside the radius. But if there is an addiitional unknown outside mass causing an additional unknown gravitational vector outward besides the circular velocity vector then my solution for the inside mass would be in error. There would have to be more mass inboard to compensate for the additional outward vector. There could be a hundred or a thousand times the mass inside and outside the radius I calculated under the assumtion that there is no ouside mass and still have the same circular velocity and radius as in the original case. As far as I can understand including outside mass would render Newton entirely irrelavant to an accurate calculation of either the inboard or outboard mass.

The sites I mentioned have been...passing the buck in this issue. At present the buck has stopped here at physics forums. The last passer of the buck said that I should post in the classical physics forum.

Must outside radius mass be included or not? How is the issue I mentioned above resolved? Is it a Newtonian solution?
 
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Calculating the Newtonian potential is made easy in the spherically symmetric case by several important facts: a) the potential outside a spherical shell is equal to the potential of an equivalent point mass at the origin and b) the potential inside a spherical shell is constant. Thus if you are located at radius R you can ignore the exterior matter at r > R and easily calculate the potential due to the matter at r < R using Kepler's laws.

Unfortunately none of these assumptions works for an axially symmetric disc. The potential outside a ring of matter is not equivalent to a point mass at the origin. Kepler's laws do not hold. And yes you must include in your calculation the potential due to the exterior matter at r > R.
 
And?
 
And therefore the potential for a given mass distribution has to be calculated numerically. You can then easily derive the velocity curve from the potential. However you want to do the inverse - derive the mass distribution from the velocity curve - and the only way to do that will be iteration: take a mass distribution and keep adjusting it until the velocity comes out right.
 
How is the fact I illustrated above handled? That if outboard mass is included then Newton only sets a lower limit for mass. Any outboard mass can be counter balanced by inboard mass to result in the same velocity.

I agree your solution is the correct solution for calculating mass through the rotation curve but it works through Newton (Kepler) when outboard mass is ignored.

Point of detail. My OP was about calculating mass from rotation in a disk not calculating mass distribution through rotation curve. Though, as I said, a correct formula for calculating mass from rotation can be used to calculate mass distribution from rotation curve. Using Newton (calculating for unknown mass inside the radius of rotation with outboard mass ignored) I can compute a mass distribution from the rotation curve but it can't be the correct mass if unknown outboard mass must be included.

I should point out that calculating a mass distribution curve based on a rotation curve (outboard mass ignored) does (with certain nuclear fusion based caveats) fit the observed distribution of visible luminant matter.
 
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Using Newton (calculating for unknown mass inside the radius of rotation with outboard mass ignored) I can compute a mass distribution from the rotation curve but it can't be the correct mass if unknown outboard mass must be included.
It isn't correct whether you include the outside mass or not. Since you don't have spherical symmetry, the orbital velocity and the 'mass inside' are not even related.
 
I have satified myself that the OP question is answered as the gravitational field is a scaler field but can also be treated as a vector field.

With a sphericly symetrical mass the vector lines outside the mass all point to the center point of the mass. For an object anywhere in 3d space outside the mass the acceleration vector is to the center point of the mass. In effect the pull of the "north pole", the "south pole", the equator and all points in between have a net vector on an object outside the mass toward the center point of the mass. For objects anywhere inside a hollow sphere the net vectors on the inside result in a zero vector on an object inside so its mass can be ignored.

For a Gaussian cylinder (a cylinder of infinite length) all gravitational vectors point to a center line rather than a center point in the cylinder. An object outside the Gaussian cylinder will have a vector towards the center line of the cylinder at 90 degrees to the line. So as in the sphericly symetrical case the pull of the "north pole", the "south pole", the equator and all points in between have a net vector on an object outside toward the center line of the cylindrical mass. Objects anywhere inside a hollow Gaussian cylinder will like the symetrical sphere have a net zero gravitational vector.

For the disk all vectors anywhere in space outside the disk do not point to the center point of the disk. Objects above the plane of the disk will have a vector towards the center point and vectors toward all points of the plane some of which do not net to the center point.

However like the hollow sphere and the Gausian cylinder for all points in the space of the plane of the disk all the vectors do point to the center point of the disk. An object outside the disk in the plane will have no polar vectors and all remaining net vectors will be to the center point of the disk.

So for an object anywhere inside a hollow ring on the plane of the ring the vectors of the ring result in a net zero vector on the object inside in the plane of the ring. The outboard mass can be ignored.

By the way for reasons I posted to the mods this will be my last post on this forum.
 
However like the hollow sphere and the Gausian cylinder for all points in the space of the plane of the disk all the vectors do point to the center point of the disk. An object outside the disk in the plane will have no polar vectors and all remaining net vectors will be to the center point of the disk. So for an object anywhere inside a hollow ring on the plane of the ring the vectors of the ring result in a net zero vector on the object inside in the plane of the ring. The outboard mass can be ignored.

Yes the vectors point to the center of the disk, but no they're not zero.
 
My last post was a little sloppy and incomplete. This one is still incomplete. It's not in greek. Though I'm sure it will be greek to some people. I think it's in plain enough language to be understadable to anyone of moderate intelligence and recognizable to to anyone skilled in the subject.

The gravitational field is a scaler field but can also be treated as a vector field.

Sphericly symetrical mass

Geometric exposition;

There is no preferred (same orientation for all points in space) axis or equator of a sphere. Only the center point has the same orientation for all points in space. Any point anywhere in 3d space inside or outside a sphere can define a point on a non preferred equatorial plane of a sphere bisecting the sphere equaly across the equatorial plane through the center point of the sphere into "north" and "south" halfs.

Vector exposition;

The "net" vectorization function convetionalizes treatment of multiple vectors through the additive properties of vectors.

Vectors point from points in space to the sources of gravitational force. Net vectors are the additive result of two or more vectors.

For all points anywhere in 3d space outside the spherical mass the vectors toward the "north half" plus the vectors toward the "south half", plus the vectors toward the equator plus the vectors toward all points in between, "east" and "west", have a single net vector toward the center point of the mass.

For all points anywhere inside a hollow sphere the (non preferred) "north" vectors plus the (non preferred) south vectors net zero polar vector. All vertical "north south" vectors can be ignored leaving only the horizontal vectors which net to equatorial vectors. The equatorial plane vectors can be treated as toward a two dimensional ring around the equatorial plane. The equatorial vectors from the center point to all sides of the equatorial "ring" equal in number and strength. All vectors from off center points pointing toward the "far side" of the equatorial "ring" increase in number and decrease in strength and the vectors toward the "near side" Of the equatorial "ring" increase in strength and decrease in number by coresponding amounts resulting in net zero horizontal (equatorial) vector. All possible vectors net zero on every point inside a hollow sphere so the mass of a hollow sphere can be ignored for all points inside.

Gaussian cylinder (a cylinder of infinite length)

Geometric exposition;

There is no preferred equator of a Gaussian cylinder. The axis of a cylinder is preferred (oriented the same for all points in space). Any point anywhere in 3d space inside or outside a Gausian cylinder can define a point on a non preferred equatorial plane through the center line of the cylinder at 90 degrees to the center line bisecting the cylinder equaly across the equatorial plane through the center line of the cylinder into "north" and "south" halfs.

Vector exposition;
For all points anywhere in 3d space outside the Gaussian cylinder the vectors toward the "north half" plus the vectors toward the "south half", plus the vectors toward the equator plus the vectors toward all points in between, "east" and "west" have a single net vector 90 degrees to the center line of the mass toward the center point of the "equatorial" disk of the mass.

For all points anywhere inside a hollow Gaussian cylinder the "north" vectors plus the "south" vectors net zero polar vector. All vertical "north south" vectors can be ignored leaving only the horizontal vectors which net to equatorial vectors. The equatorial plane vectors can be treated as toward a two dimensional ring around the equatorial plane. The equatorial vectors net zero on the center point as all horizontal vectors equal in number and strength from the center point. All vectors from off center points pointing toward the "far side" of the equatorial ring increase in number and decrease in strength and the vectors toward the "near side" increase in strength and decrease in number by coresponding amounts resulting in net zero horizontal (equatorial) vector. All possible vectors net zero on every point inside a hollow Gaussian cylinder so the mass of a hollow Gaussian cylinder can be ignored for all points inside.

Disk

Geometric exposition;

In a disk there is only one preferred equator, only one preferred axis and only one preferred center point.

The vector exposition only treats for points in the preferred equatorial plane oriented to the preferred axis from the preferred center point.

Vector exposition
For the disk all vectors anywhere in space outside the disk do not point to the center point of the disk. Points above or below the plane of the disk will have vectors towards the center point and vectors toward all points of the plane which do not net to the center point.

However like the hollow sphere and the Gausian cylinder all vectors from all points in the plane of the equatorial disk outside the disk net to the center point of the disk. A point outside the disk in the plane has no north or south polar vectors. The polar vectors net zero.

For all points anywhere inside a hollow ring on the plane of the ring all points anywhere inside, like a hollow Gaussian cylinder and like the symetrical sphere, have north vectors plus the south vectors equal net zero polar vector (as there is no north or south mass there are no north or south vectors so the polar vectors net zero). The equatorial plane vectors can be treated as toward a two dimensional ring around the equatorial plane. Like the equatorial disk of the sphere and the Gaussian cylinder the vectors from the center point to all sides of the equatorial ring are egual in strength and equal in number so net zero vector from the center point. All vectors from off center points to the sides reduce in strength and increase in number to the far side of the ring and vectors to the near sides increase in strength and decrease in number by coresponding amounts to the far side vectors resulting in net zero horizontal (equatorial) vector. All possible vectors net zero from every point inside a hollow ring in the plane of the ring so the mass of a hollow ring can be ignored for all points inside the ring in the plane of the ring.

Thus all mass outside the radius of any point in a disk can be ignored.
 
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  • #10
v4theory said:
Thus all mass outside the radius of any point in a disk can be ignored.
If you're claiming that a disk-shaped mass distribution has the property that mass outside a given radius has no gravitational effect on points within, that's not true. A flat disk and a spherically symmetric mass distribution have different properties.
 
  • #11
Doc Al said:
If you're claiming that a disk-shaped mass distribution has the property that mass outside a given radius has no gravitational effect on points within, that's not true. A flat disk and a spherically symmetric mass distribution have different properties.

That's what he said. Means a much now as it did then.
 
  • #12
v4theory said:
That's what he said. Means a much now as it did then.
How about this: Learn how Newton derived the result for a spherical distribution of mass. Look up the Shell Theorems. (Or use calculus.) Then see if you can do the same for a disk. You'll find that you cannot.
 
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  • #13
Doc Al said:
How about this: Learn how Newton derived the result for a spherical distribution of mass. Look up the Shell Theorems. (Or use calculus.) Then see if you can do the same for a disk. You'll find that you cannot.

Well this is so basic, high school stuff really, you probably just don't remember it.

You did read my posts didn't you? I wrote a lengthy exposition of the issue above. I think it's correct even though it isn't in greek. It uses concepts and terms that have been mainstream for the field for hundreds of years since Newton. My treatment of the sphere and Gaussian cylinder is virtually verbatim from Newton and Gauss. They didn't treat explicitly for a disk as the disk is a priori fundamental to both. Since you claim the mantle of expert and mentor, if you think I made a mistake, perhaps you could write a more detailed critique pointing them out rather than one composed of such brief unsupported assertions.

And no, I don't think "i am an expert" is good support for assertions. Take another look at my above post. That is what I call good support. At least it's detailed and Illustrates all the relavant aspects.

So far you are just reiterating what I believe I have proven is simply a common misconception.

How about I make it easy for you and take the points one by one?

The gravitational field is a scaler field but can also be treated as a vector field.

True or false?
 
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  • #14
v4theory said:
Well this is so basic, high school stuff really, you probably just don't remember it.
:biggrin: Nice try.

You did read my posts didn't you? I wrote a lengthy exposition of the issue above. I think it's correct even though it isn't in greek. It uses concepts and terms that have been mainstream for the field for hundreds of years since Newton.
While you did use some recognizable terms, the post itself seemed like word salad.

My treatment of the sphere and Gaussian cylinder is virtually verbatim from Newton and Gauss. They didn't treat explicitly for a disk as the disk is a priori fundamental to both. Since you claim the mantle of expert and mentor, if you think I made a mistake, perhaps you could write a more detailed critique pointing them out rather than one composed of such brief unsupported assertions.
Since you claim to understand Gauss's law, please describe in plain English how you'd apply it to a sphere (no problem), an infinite cylinder (no problem), and then a disk (big problem).

Please, no baloney about vector and scalar fields.
 
  • #15
v4theory said:
Disk

Geometric exposition;

In a disk there is only one preferred equator, only one preferred axis and only one preferred center point.

The vector exposition only treats for points in the preferred equatorial plane oriented to the preferred axis from the preferred center point.

Vector exposition
For the disk all vectors anywhere in space outside the disk do not point to the center point of the disk. Points above or below the plane of the disk will have vectors towards the center point and vectors toward all points of the plane which do not net to the center point.

However like the hollow sphere and the Gausian cylinder all vectors from all points in the plane of the equatorial disk outside the disk net to the center point of the disk. A point outside the disk in the plane has no north or south polar vectors. The polar vectors net zero.
Translation: The field at any point within the plane of the disk cannot have a component perpendicular to the disk. Good!
For all points anywhere inside a hollow ring on the plane of the ring all points anywhere inside, like a hollow Gaussian cylinder and like the symetrical sphere, have north vectors plus the south vectors equal net zero polar vector (as there is no north or south mass there are no north or south vectors so the polar vectors net zero). The equatorial plane vectors can be treated as toward a two dimensional ring around the equatorial plane. Like the equatorial disk of the sphere and the Gaussian cylinder the vectors from the center point to all sides of the equatorial ring are egual in strength and equal in number so net zero vector from the center point.
Translation: The field at the center of a ring must be zero. Good!

All vectors from off center points to the sides reduce in strength and increase in number to the far side of the ring and vectors to the near sides increase in strength and decrease in number by coresponding amounts to the far side vectors resulting in net zero horizontal (equatorial) vector. All possible vectors net zero from every point inside a hollow ring in the plane of the ring so the mass of a hollow ring can be ignored for all points inside the ring in the plane of the ring.
Here's where your argument fails. For any point within a uniform spherical shell you can divide the shell into cones of equal angle and show that the contributions from opposite sides must cancel. This is because the area of the mass subtended is proportional to the distance squared while the field is inversely proportional to distance squared. (See the discussion "Field Inside a Spherical Shell" towards the bottom of this page: http://galileo.phys.virginia.edu/classes/152.mf1i.spring02/GravField.htm" )

This argument does not work for a circular ring. For any point within the ring you can divide the ring into segments of equal angle. Unfortunately, the mass subtended is proportional to the distance (not the distance squared) while the field is still inversely proportional to the distance squared. Thus the far end exerts less force than the near end, proving that there is a net force radially outward at any off-center point within the ring.

Thus all mass outside the radius of any point in a disk can be ignored.
As shown above, no.
 
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  • #16
Now we're getting somewhere!

Your mistake was to apply a conic area section to a treatment that had already treated for the vertical component of the vectors to the "north south" polar mass. North component plus south component nets zero vertical vectors. This leaves only the horizontal components of the vectors to the vertical mass which net to equatorial vectors.A ring, a circular line, not an area. This is how it is treated in the sphere, the cylinder and the disk. The treatment of the equatorial vectors is the same for the sphere, cylinder and disk because they are the same. A ring of vectors netting toward equatorial mass. The horizontal component of the vectors in the sphere and cylinder cases are netting toward a virtual ring mass. In the disk ring case it an actual ring mass. A net vector to a virtual mass shouldn't be too hard to understand. We do it when we take two masses in front and treat the vectors to them as vectors to virtual points in the centers and then add those vectors to net a vector to a virtual mass point between the two masses where there is no actual mass. The horizontal components of the vertical mass can be treated as if they are equatorial vectors because that's the direction the horizonatl component's vectors net.

The quoted part of my ealier post that you took dispute to was taken out of a context that had already treated for the vertical component.
 
  • #17
v4theory said:
Now we're getting somewhere!

Your mistake was to apply a conic area section to a treatment that had already treated for the vertical component of the vectors to the "north south" polar mass. North component plus south component nets zero vertical vectors. This leaves only the horizontal components of the vectors to the vertical mass which net to equatorial vectors.A ring, a circular line, not an area. This is how it is treated in the sphere, the cylinder and the disk. The treatment of the equatorial vectors is the same for the sphere, cylinder and disk because they are the same. A ring of vectors netting toward equatorial mass. The horizontal component of the vectors in the sphere and cylinder cases are netting toward a virtual ring mass. In the disk ring case it an actual ring mass. A net vector to a virtual mass shouldn't be too hard to understand. We do it when we take two masses in front and treat the vectors to them as vectors to virtual points in the centers and then add those vectors to net a vector to a virtual mass point between the two masses where there is no actual mass. The horizontal components of the vertical mass can be treated as if they are equatorial vectors because that's the direction the horizonatl component's vectors net.

The quoted part of my ealier post that you took dispute to was taken out of a context that had already treated for the vertical component.
Sorry, but I can't understand what you're saying here. As I showed above, the argument that allows you to conclude that the gravitational field within a spherical shell is everywhere zero does not work for a ring of mass.

Just stating that the vectors must add to zero is not enough--you must actually provide an argument.

If you know calculus, actually do the calculation. (If you attempt to apply Gauss's law, you'll find that the ring lacks sufficient symmetry to get anywhere. Recall that the Gaussian surface is a closed surface.)
 
  • #18
You're conflating scaler field terms in a vector field treatment. The surface area of the conic section scales up by the square of distance while the strength per unit area scales down by the square of the distance. See? Scaler field.

Vectors don't scale. Their functions are strength, direction and number. Even if two vectors are on the same line they are not the same vectors. You can't treat vectors as "the strength of the vector increases or decreases with distance". You can only say a vector from a point closer to a mass has a greater net magnitude than a net vector from a point farther from a mass. Each point in space has its own unique collection of vectors and has to be treated that way in a vector field treatment. The closer the point is to a mass (not treated as a point source) the greater the number of vectors to the mass. You can explicitly add and subtract vectors and components of vectors for net vectors.

You never did answer the question.

Gravity is a scaler field and can also be treated as a vector field.

True or false.
 
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  • #19
v4theory said:
You're conflating scaler field terms in a vector field treatment.
Not me. I've only spoken about the gravitational field, which is a vector. (The gravitational potential is a scalar, but I haven't mentioned that.)
The surface area of the conic section scales up by the square of distance
Right, for a spherical shell.
while the strength per unit area scales down by the square of the distance.
The strength per unit area of what? What are you talking about?
See? Scaler field.
Huh?

Vectors don't scale. Their functions are strength, direction and number. Even if two vectors are on the same line they are not the same vectors. You can't treat vectors as "the strength of the vector increases or decreases with distance". You can only say a vector from a point closer to a mass has a greater magnitude than a vector from a point farther from a mass. Each point in space has its own unique collection of vectors and has to be treated that way in a vector field treatment.
Huh? What are you talking about? You can certainly say that the gravitational field (a vector) of a point mass decreases with distance. What's the problem with that?

You never did answer the question.

Gravity is a scaler field and can also be treated as a vector field.

True or false.
The gravitational potential is a scalar field; the gravitational field is a vector field. They are related, but not the same.
 
  • #20
Doc Al said:
v4theory said:
The surface area of the conic section scales up by the square of distance while the strength per unit area scales down by the square of the distance.



Doc Al said:
The strength per unit area of what? What are you talking about?

The strength per unit area of the shell.

In the conic section the area of the shell in the section. Double the distance from the surface of the shell square the area in the conic section (4 times more area in the conic section), inverse square the strength per unit area of the conic section (quarter the strength per unit area). 4 times more units at a quarter per unit equals same total strength per unit distance. Balanced by a coresponding reduction of area and increase in strength per unit area in a coresponding conic section of the other side of the sphere. Net zero

In the ring, in vector terms. The vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) from a point equal in number for all directions from the point regardless of the distance from any other point.
In the ring it is an angle section of a line rather than a conic section of an area. You can't treat it as an area because it doesn't occupy an area. In the section of the ring covered by the angle section if you you double the distance you double the length of the section of the ring in the angle section (2 times more length in the angle section), Half the number of vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) pointing at that section per unit length of that section. (half the number of vectors per unit length) Two times the length of the section at half the number of vectors pointing to each unit of length equals same total number of vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) pointing at the longer section for a longer distance to it. Balanced by a corresponding decrease in length of the ring and increase in number of vectors per unit length in a coresponding angle of ring section on the other side of the ring. Net zero.

The sphere considered in vector terms. As distance from the surface of the shell increases the area in the conic section increases by the square of the distance and the number of vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) to the area per unit area reduces by the square of the distance. Four times the area one quarter the number of vectors per unit area. Four times the area at one quarter the number of vectors per unit area equals same number of vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) for total area. Therefore the gravitational potential remains the same.

I suspect you are considering the vectorization in terms of what happens outside a spherical mass.

Say a point has 4 vectors (4 potentials for gravitational acceleration) pointing at the whole area of massive sphere at one unit of distance from the sphere. If you double the distance to the mass the area the mass presents to the point is reduced by the square of the distance. It occupies a quarter of the conic section from the farther point than it did at the closer distance. It therefore now has only one vector pointing at it. The number of vectors pointing at it has scaled down by the square of the distance. The potential for gravitational acceleration of the vectors has not scaled down. The number of vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) pointing at the mass has scaled down.

It would be incorrect to say the potential for gravitational acceleration for the original 4 vectors has scaled down. You could say the net potential for gravitational acceleration for each of the original 4 vectors has scaled down by a quarter as the full magnitude of the one vector pointing at the mass is then being divided by the three others vectors not pointing at the mass that have no potential for gravitational acceleration.


Doc Al said:
You can certainly say that the gravitational field (a vector) of a point mass decreases with distance. What's the problem with that?

That's incorrect.

The gravitational field in vector terms is a field of points with vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) from the points pointing in all directions. It's conventional to treat for the vector that has positive gravitational acceleration potential on it toward mass (not neccesarily a point mass) because gravitation as a treatment treats for the effect of gravity on the space around mass. In vector terms gravity produces a potintial for acceleration on the vector of a point that is pointing to a mass. The other vectors from the point are still there. They just don't have a positive gravitational potential for acceleration on them. The gravitational field is not "(a vector)" it is a vector field.
Doc Al said:
The gravitational potential is a scalar field; the gravitational field is a vector field. They are related, but not the same.

No the gravitational potential not a scaler field. The gravitational potential treats for specific points in a gravitational field. The gravitational field can be treated as a scaler field or a vector field.

By the way, it seems the further we get into this the shorter (and less...accurate?) your responses are getting...again. I understand that brevity and some inaccuracy may be a common habit teachers can develop with their students. However it is also a common dodge by the uninformed on internet bulletin boards.
 
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  • #21
v4theory said:
The strength per unit area of the shell.

In the conic section the area of the shell in the section. Double the distance from the surface of the shell square the area in the conic section (4 times more area in the conic section), inverse square the strength per unit area of the conic section (quarter the strength per unit area). 4 times more units at a quarter per unit equals same total strength per unit distance. Balanced by a compensating reduction of area and increase in strength of the other side of the sphere. Net zero
I suspect that this is your version of the argument I gave in post #15 (first given by Newton). Note that it only works for spherical shells.

In the ring, in vector terms. The vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) from a point equal in number for all directions from the point regardless of the distance from any other point.
In the angle section the length of the ring in the section. Double the distance double the length of the ring in the angle section (2 times more length in the angle section), Half the number of vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) pointing at that section per unit length of that section. (half the number of vectors per unit length) Two times the length of the section at half the number of vectors pointing to each unit of length equals same total number of vectors (potentials for gravitational acceleration) pointing at the longer section for a longer distance to it. Therefore the gravitational potential remains the same.
Please rewrite this using standard terminology. You say vectors, then immediately mention potential--which is a scalar. We are talking vectors here. Also, I don't know what you mean when you refer to the 'number of vectors'.

The gravitational field produced by a small segment of mass at some distance is a vector. It has magnitude and direction; the magnitude varies with the mass of the segment and the distance from the segment. Unlike with the spherical shell, the field from the 'cone' (really just an angle, since we are talking about a ring not a shell) of mass does not balance on each side, since the mass increases linearly with distance from a point (for a given angle) while the field per unit mass decreases with the square of the distance.

Go back to post #15 and reread my arguments carefully.
 
  • #22
v4theory said:
That's incorrect.

The gravitational field in vector terms is a field of points with vectors pointing in all directions. It's conventional to point a vector from some of the points toward mass (not neccesarily a point mass) because gravitation as a treatment treats for the effect of gravity on the space around mass. In vector terms gravity produces a potintial for acceleration on the vector of a point that is pointing to a mass. The gravitational field is not "(a vector)" it is a vector field.
:rolleyes: Give me a break.

At any point in the space surrounding the mass you can represent the strength and direction of the gravitational field by a vector. (After all, a vector field just means that you've assigned a vector to every point over some space.)
 
  • #23
v4theory said:
No the gravitational potential not a scaler field. The gravitational potential treats for specific points in a gravitational field.
Apparently you have no clue as to what gravitational potential is. Either that, or you don't know what a scalar field is. (Or both.)
The gravitational field can be treated as a scaler field or a vector field.
You can certainly represent gravity by the gravitational potential (a scalar) or gravitational field strength (a vector). When talking about the gravitational field, most people mean the vector field representing the force per unit test mass at each point.

Pick one and get on with it. Don't mix them up.
By the way, seems the further we get into this the shorter (and less...accurate?) your responses are getting...again.
And you continue to serve up the same word salad.

(How many times will you edit your post?)
 
  • #24
Doc Al said:
How many times will you edit your post?


You're right I should take more time to compose before posting. So should you. Three posts since my last post?

I'm going to give you more time too to think over what I wrote before I post again.
 
  • #25
v4theory said:
Three posts since my last post?
You keep adding to it; my last posts were responses to those additions.
I'm going to give you more time too to think over what I wrote before I post again.
I'm done.
 
  • #26
Here's where I'm at.

I can't understand how I can treat the sphere and the cylinder, both inside and out with a vector treatment and get the exact same result as your scaler treatment. But when I apply the exact same procedure on the disk you disagree with the result.

I think I'm done too.
 
  • #27
On second thought I think I can show how your conic section treatment of the ring falls apart as I can produce two different results with it. One that fits your result and one that fits mine using your exact same method.

Would you agree that your treatment of the ring with conic sections that can produce two different results is the wrong treatment?

Wait for a day or two to compose.
 
Last edited:
  • #28
v4theory said:
I can't understand how I can treat the sphere and the cylinder, both inside and out with a vector treatment and get the exact same result as your scaler treatment. But when I apply the exact same procedure on the disk you disagree with the result.
Your 'vector treatment' is nothing more than vague handwaving.

Please look up the word 'scalar'. To use a 'scalar treatment' for this problem, you'd calculate the potential function and then take the gradient to find the field. Why don't you try it? (This has nothing to do with my simple, yet precise argument.)

v4theory said:
On second thought I think I can show how your conic section treatment of the ring falls apart as I can produce two different results with it. One that fits your result and one that fits mine using your exact same method.

Would you agree that your treatment of the ring with conic sections that can produce two different results is the wrong treatment?
No, it just means that you do not understand the simple argument given.
 
  • #29
Doc Al said:
Your 'vector treatment' is nothing more than vague handwaving.

Please look up the word 'scalar'. To use a 'scalar treatment' for this problem, you'd calculate the potential function and then take the gradient to find the field. Why don't you try it? (This has nothing to do with my simple, yet precise argument.)


No, it just means that you do not understand the simple argument given.

The universal law of gravitation works for every aspect . However in the case of ring the centre is in the middle where there is no mass . But still the vectors and scalars both will work .

But in this case its sheer calculation . Here you just can't take vectors of velocity .
 
  • #30
Doc Al said:
Your 'vector treatment' is nothing more than vague handwaving.

Please look up the word 'scalar'. To use a 'scalar treatment' for this problem, you'd calculate the potential function and then take the gradient to find the field. Why don't you try it? (This has nothing to do with my simple, yet precise argument.)


No, it just means that you do not understand the simple argument given.

That looks like an air tight case of a closed...loop.

Why should you want me to use a "scaler treatment" for this problem? You and I both know that is a complicated, lengthy, time consuming method. You wouldn't want me to use a treatment that I "don't understand" to produce a complicated "word salad" that produces a result that disagrees with yours would you?

Though I know it won't convince you as you know, even without seeing it, it must be wrong. I think, first, for now, I'll stick to composing my disasembly of your (handwaving?) conic section treatment. Maybe it'll convince sombody else.

Should you diegn to produce a "scaler treatment" for this problem I'll have a look and if it's right maybe we'll all learn something. If it's wrong I think you know I'm prepared to disasemble it. Though I'm sure you already know that if I did it would just be because I "didn't understand" it and produced another "handwaving" "word salad" that disagrees with your result.
 

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