How Strong is the Gravitational Field on a Neutron Star's Surface?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around calculating the gravitational field at the surface of a neutron star with a mass 1.80 times that of the Sun and a radius of 9.3 km. The gravitational field is calculated using the formula g = GM/r², where G is the gravitational constant. Participants emphasize the importance of using the correct mass for the Sun, which is approximately 1.9 x 10^30 kg, and ensuring all units are in SI format. One user reports a correct answer of 2.748 x 10^12 m/s², highlighting issues with the homework system not recognizing scientific notation. The conversation concludes with suggestions to verify calculations and check the accuracy of the Sun's mass used.
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Homework Statement



What is the magnitude of the gravitational field at the surface of a neutron star whose mass is 1.80 times the mass of the Sun and whose radius is 9.3 km?

Homework Equations



g = GM/r2

The Attempt at a Solution



G is ofcourse 6.67x10^-11
r^2 is 8.649x10^7 m

Now I don't know what to take as mass. I took just 1.8 and it didn't work. I just took the mass of sun as 1.9x10^30kg and it didn't work and I also tried the product of those two.
What am I missing?
Okay I tried all I could but I am now stuck. Can someone help me. Thanks so much.
 
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It appears you have everything you need. If the nuetrons star's mass is 1.8 times the suns, you should just times the suns mass by 1.8, which it appears you've done.
I would just check everything is in SI units and maybe reread the question.
 
LBloom said:
It appears you have everything you need. If the nuetrons star's mass is 1.8 times the suns, you should just times the suns mass by 1.8, which it appears you've done.
I would just check everything is in SI units and maybe reread the question.

Thanks, I double checked everything yet nothing seems to work.
Even tried a negative sign in front of all possible answers.
 
Apparently the STUPID homework system does not recognize x 10^y format yet the only error it gives is incorrect answer.
 
if you don't mind, can you tell me what you've been getting as the answer? Maybe i can check if its just a computational error
also, it sounds like its a multiple choice qu, so maybe you should check their units too? Not really sure what the problem is.
 
LBloom said:
if you don't mind, can you tell me what you've been getting as the answer? Maybe i can check if its just a computational error
also, it sounds like its a multiple choice qu, so maybe you should check their units too? Not really sure what the problem is.
We have an online system where you input the answer and it says if it's correct or not. If it's correct you get the points.
2748510000000 m/s^2 is the answer and the system recognized it (ie it's correct)
I was inputting the number as 2.748 x 10^12 and hence the system said incorrect answer which is poor design of the system IMHO

And it's not multiple choice
 
hmm, i got a similar answer, but i used a different measurement for the sun's mass (through google). I've never used the system you've described, but it might help to try looking up the sun's mass to a greater accuracy. Even if you were to round it, it looks closer to 2x10^30 than 1.9. Other than that, I'm not sure what else there is besides fiddling with the numbers
I'd help you more, but I got to get some sleep, its like 2 in NY. good luck with that system though.
 
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