Is Gravitational Force conserved at the origin (r=0)?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the nature of gravitational force at the origin (r=0), where the gravitational field is undefined due to the presence of a singularity. It is acknowledged that gravity is a conservative force field, but the singularity complicates the evaluation of line integrals through that point. The conversation explores the implications for trajectories, particularly in the context of two point masses, suggesting that orbits do not pass through the singularity and thus remain predictable. The need to consider paths that approach the singularity without crossing it is emphasized, as well as the complications introduced by the singularity in gravitational interactions. Overall, the treatment of gravitational forces at the origin raises significant theoretical considerations in gravitational physics.
chi_rho
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I know gravity is a conservative force field and can be treated as such for all intents and purposes, but I was just thinking that in order to show that a vector field is conservative that vector field must be defined everywhere (gravitational force field is not defined at r=0).

I was thinking that you may need to examine a curve that encloses the singularity (r=0) like the unit circle, but I'm not sure this is the best way to think about this problem.

Any additional insight into how to treat/explain the conservative/non-conservative nature of the gravitational force field at the origin would be appreciate.
 
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chi_rho said:
gravitational force field is not defined at r=0
Why not?
 
chi_rho said:
I was thinking that you may need to examine a curve that encloses the singularity (r=0) like the unit circle, but I'm not sure this is the best way to think about this problem.

We're talking about the gravitational field of an ideal point mass here, right? If we're dealing with a real planet or other spherically symmetric mass with non-zero size, there won't be a singularity at r=0 and there won't be any problem.

But with that said, yes, you have the right idea. If there is a singularity at a given point, you can't evaluate a line integral that passes through that point and you must consider only paths that pass arbitrarily close to it. In practice, this is a seldom a concern because we never encounter gravitating point masses in real life; when we model a real planet as a point mass, we're only working with the space outside the surface of the planet so we don't have trajectories that pass through r=0.
 
Nugatory said:
If there is a singularity at a given point, you can't evaluate a line integral that passes through that point and you must consider only paths that pass arbitrarily close to it.

What does this mean for a radial elliptic trajectory, e.g. for two point masses? Is their position still predictable after they passed the singularity? That shouldn't be possible if the integral can't be evaluated through that point.
 
DrStupid said:
What does this mean for a radial elliptic trajectory, e.g. for two point masses? Is their position still predictable after they passed the singularity? That shouldn't be possible if the integral can't be evaluated through that point.
Would a mass, point or otherwise, pass through the singularity? No impact?
 
tfr000 said:
Would a mass, point or otherwise, pass through the singularity? No impact?
If you want to take it that far, you are into GR - no?
 
Even worse - a point mass will be a black hole.
 
DrStupid said:
What does this mean for a radial elliptic trajectory, e.g. for two point masses? Is their position still predictable after they passed the singularity? That shouldn't be possible if the integral can't be evaluated through that point.

I'm sorry, but I don't understand what you're asking here. The elliptical orbit of two non-trivial masses approximated as point particles doesn't pass through either singularity, so the problem doesn't arise.
 
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tfr000 said:
Would a mass, point or otherwise, pass through the singularity?

I don't know if they pass through the singularity. In the limit of zero angular momentum a classical orbit would result in a degenerate ellipse with a 180° turn in the center. In this case the point masses would bounce off the center. But I do not think it is that easy. The singularity changes the situation.

tfr000 said:
No impact?

That would result in additional complications. Thus we should limit the interaction to gravity only.
 
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