Inverse Square Law: What & How to Prove It

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The inverse square law describes how forces like gravity, electricity, and magnetism decrease in strength with distance, specifically following the formula 1/r^2. This law can be demonstrated through empirical measurements, such as observing the Coulombic force between charged objects as they are separated. Additionally, the geometric aspect of the inverse square law can be proven using geometry, where the area of a sphere increases with the square of the radius. While some forces adhere to this law, not all forces do, making it essential to specify the context when discussing its applicability. Overall, the inverse square law is a fundamental principle in physics that can be validated through both empirical and geometric methods.
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What is the inverse square law and how do you prove it?
 
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eddybob123 said:
What is the inverse square law and how do you prove it?

That sounds interesting. What is it? Could you provide a web link or two to help us understand your question?

How do you think something like that could be "proved"? What is the formula for the area of a sphere maybe?
 
For forces like electric, magnetic, and gravitation, the inverse square law says that the force from a point source gets weaker the further you go from the source of the force. It falls off as 1/r^2 where r is the distance you are from the source. You prove it by measuring it. Other things obey the inverse square law too. If you have a light source, then the amount of light landing on a fixed area (like a piece of paper) facing the source will fall off as you move the area further away. It will fall off as 1/r^2. This is the geometric inverse square law. If you have a piece of paper at distance r, and you move it to 2r, you will have to make it 2 squared or four times larger in order for it to look the same size. This kind of inverse square law you can prove with geometry.
 
are you sure? because human measurements can't really prove it
 
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eddybob123 said:
are u sure? cause human measurements can't really prove it

Some forces do not obey the inverse square law, so for a general force, you can't prove it.

For the geometrical inverse square law, you can prove it, by geometry.
 
eddybob123 said:
are you sure? because human measurements can't really prove it

Course we can prove it empirically. We take two pith balls and give them each a net charge and then measure the Coulombic force as a function of distance. We will see that the force drops off as 1/r^2 with some proportional constant.
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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