hexrd
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Is it true that if you dig a tunnel to the center of the Earth you will experience weightlessness? I heard that you will get heavier then become weightless.
The discussion centers around the concept of experiencing weightlessness at the center of the Earth, exploring gravitational effects as one digs a tunnel towards the center. Participants examine theoretical implications, gravitational forces, and the impact of Earth's non-uniform density.
Participants express multiple competing views regarding the gravitational effects experienced while digging towards the center of the Earth. There is no consensus on whether one would experience weightlessness or an increase in weight due to varying density.
The discussion highlights limitations in assumptions about uniform density and gravitational effects, as well as the implications of Earth's shape and mass distribution on gravitational experiences.
hexrd said:Is it true that if you dig a tunnel to the center of the Earth you will experience weightlessness? I heard that you will get heavier then become weightless.
HallsofIvy said:Yes, at the center of the earth, the gravitational pull due to the mass around you is equal in every direction and so you would be "weightless". (That's assuming you fill in the hole behind you. Otherwise there would be a miniscule pull in the direction opposite the hole.)
selfAdjoint said:The Newtonian logic of concentric spherical shells still works with a density gradient.
No. The "Newtonian logic of concentric spherical shells" that SelfAdjoint refers to is the fact (proved by Newton) that a uniform spherical shell of mass has a gravitational field that is zero everywhere inside the shell.enigma said:If that is true, then if you were inside a hypothetical Dyson sphere, the gravitational force of the sun would be the same whether you were right near the sun or out near the sphere itself. Right?