Gravitational attraction force b/w point mass and rod

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the gravitational force between a unit mass M1 and a thin rod of mass M2 and length L, separated by a distance r. The initial approach involves integrating the force over the length of the rod, but a key correction is needed regarding the distance used in the gravitational formula. The correct distance should account for the center of mass of the rod, which is at L/2 from one end, leading to the force equation F = G(M1M2)/(r + L/2)^2. Participants confirm that integrating correctly is crucial, and the initial method was flawed due to miscalculating the effective distance. The conversation concludes with validation of the correct approach and a light-hearted acknowledgment of the mistake.
Redoctober
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I was wondering about a scenario where we have a unit mass M1 and a thin rod of mass M2 of length L with a distance r between them attracting each other . Is my following approach to the problem correct ??!

let s = r + L
I know that F= -(GM1M2)/(s^2) where G is gravitation constant

therefore F= -GM1*∫1/(s^2).dM2
I know that M2 = λ*L where λ is density
therefore dM2 = λdL . from ds = dL
I get dM2 = λdL
Therefore finally , F= -GM1*∫1/(s^2)*λ.ds
Integrating from r to r+L
I get F= -(GM1M2)/(r*(r+L))

Equation analysis - If i put limit L-->0 , i turn the rod to a point mass, therefore i get -GM1M2/(r^2) which is actually the gravitational attraction force for two masses :D

Thanks in advance :)
 
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You should describe the geometry of the situation. How is the rod oriented with respect to the point?
 
mathman said:
You should describe the geometry of the situation. How is the rod oriented with respect to the point?

Point mass --> . <------distance R------> _______________ <-- Rod M2 with length L
 


The force should be
F = G\frac{M_1M_2}{(r+\frac{L}{2})^2}
So something went wrong there.
 
I knew there was something wrong, maybe take the variable or the partition set i took for integrating.May you show me how you did it ?? :) thanks
 
Well the gravitational force between two points is F = G\frac{M_1M_2}{r^2} where r is the separation of the two points. Secondly in gravity the force between a point and an entire system is the same as the force between that point and the center of mass of that system (giving the center of mass the entire mass of the system), since the center of mass of a uniform rod is in the middle I added half the distance of the rod to the distance between your particle and the start of the rod to find the r term.
 
Oh i see , Center of mass does represent all the dm in the system so simply we can take distance as r+L/2, But if we were to proof it using the idea of F=-(GM1)/(s^2)*ΣdM2 thus F=-(GM1)/(s^2)∫1.dM2 ? How can it be done ?
 
Redoctober is right, and JHamm is wrong. You must integrate just as Red did.
This is a standard problem in EM texts for the electric force on a charge.
The texts all give Red's answer.
 
clem said:
Redoctober is right, and JHamm is wrong. You must integrate just as Red did.
This is a standard problem in EM texts for the electric force on a charge.
The texts all give Red's answer.

Oh k . Thankyou so much for vertifying :D ! I am happy that my approach to the problem worked !
 
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Sorry about that then, looks like I'll be eating foot tonight :s
 
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