Finding Equal Force Distance from Moon

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To find the distance from the Moon where the gravitational forces from the Earth and Sun are equal, the initial equation used was incorrect due to confusion over mass variables. The participant realized that the mass of the particle at the Lagrange point needed to be included in the calculations. The misunderstanding stemmed from incorrectly assuming the masses of the Earth and Moon could cancel out. Clarification was provided that only one mass variable should be present on each side of the equation. The discussion highlights the importance of correctly identifying all variables in gravitational equations.
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So I am supposed to find the distance from the moon where the force on a particle from the Earth and sun is equal.

I get this expression (earth-moon distance is 400 000km):
yMm/(r^2) = yMm / (400000km-r)^2

But from that I get r=200 000km and the answer should be 40 000km...

whats wrong with the expression?

thanks
 
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mass of the moon != mass of the earth
 
but the product of the masses is the same on both sides right? don't they cancel...?
 
No, they are not the same and they can't cancel if they are not the same.
 
then what is the expression...?
 
There should be only one mass variable on each side of your equation.
 
but Newtons gravitation law is yMm/r^2...
 
Yes. But do you KNOW what M and m are?
 
M=mass of earth
m=mass of moon

?
 
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oh, heh, I don't know what caused me to be so slow... I forgot the mass of the particle at the Lagrance point...

Bah, sorry for the trouble :P
 
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