Normal force cancels out the force of gravity?

In summary, normal force acts perpendicular to the surface and can cancel out the gravitational force if the surface is horizontal. However, an object will not fly up if there is no net force accelerating it upwards. The normal force can change depending on the forces acting on the object, and it does not always equal the weight of the object. It equals the magnitude of the force pushing down on the surface, which can be more or less than the weight of the object.
  • #36

dude you should have aclear notion that an object will only have motion in
a direction only if it has some velocity or acceleration in that direction.we stay on the ground becoz we don't have anyvelocitu or acceleration in the upward direction.when we jumpwe have a velocity in upward direction.at that instant no normal force afting on us and becoz of gravitational force we get pulled back down
 
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  • #37
Plus forces vary on the basis of your point of view i.e. If you want to considr forces on the man there are only two
1.mg by the earth
2.normal force by the surface
cases where friction comes into play also needs the tendency of an object to move in a particular direction which is opposed by frictional force.
 
  • #38
An interesting question to ask is how a table manages to provide a normal force equal (and opposite) to the weight of any object (within reason) I care to place on it. The answer is that the table compresses/buckles UNTIL the forces balance. It's just like placing a body on a top-pan balance with a very stiff compressible spring inside it. In fact things are a little more complicated than I've made out, because there will be rapid oscillations of imperceptible amplitude if the object is just plonked on the table. The oscillations will rapidly damp out. Hope this helps.
 
  • #39
1. Newton's third law is widely misunderstood. His 'action' and 'reaction' were not forces but impulses. "An impressed force is an action to change the motion (momentum) of a body". Newton specifically denied that the equal and opposite gravitational forces between bodies were examples of the third law, If they were not equal this would lead to outcomes that were "absurd and contrary to the first law". The third law is only needed for net forces. 'Equal and opposite forces in an interaction' does not presuppose that anything is accelerating and is required for conservation of energy. Equal and opposite net forces in an accelerating system are required for conservation of momentum.
2. A body at the surface of the Earth and the rest of the Earth interact gravitationally. This means that each experiences a force of the same magnitude, directed towards the other and independent of any other interaction in which either or both may be involved.
3. Because the Earth is not uniform the direction of the gravitational force is not necessarily towards the actual center of the Earth.
4. Because the Earth is rotating, and everything on it is in accelerated motion, other than at the poles, the normal force at a horizontal surface is not equal to the gravitational force on a body at rest on the surface. It is somewhat less. The difference is quite easy to calculate.
 
  • #40
Hello guys, I had seen a lot of threads on gravity but they are closed now. I have a curiosity for asking this question.
Instead of defining gravitational force in a rather complex way (like curved space time, etc..) can we define it simply through our observations? Like can we say that gravity is just a net effect of van deer Waals force of all the molecules summed together? It seems sensible to me as it is also somewhat proportional to mass.
Also could it be some net force related to EM force itself, since the sub atomic particles are not stationary within an atom, could that net fluctuations may support gravity somehow?(like in the case of van deer Waals forces)
Please think :woot:
(Also sorry if I have asked something wrong or silly or unrelated. I am just curious to learn:nb))
(Please reply guys!o_O)
 
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  • #41
@Shri13: Van Deer Waals forces are in consistent. Like gravity, they are week forces, but unlike gravity, they appear and disappear inconsistently. The force of gravity is always proportional to the inverse square if the distance between the two objects and directly porportional to the pruduct of their masses. There's a gravitational constant, but because it is a constant we can just ignore it for now. In regard to subatomic particles, the centripital force of attraction is due to opposite charges, protons and electrons, their inertia and co-interaction keeping them from crashing inward. Lastly, keep in mind that the four great forces of the universe were initially one super force immediately after the Big Bang, and that it was shortly there after that each if the independent forces, one of which was gravity, split off from one another... And that the entropeic nature of the universe is why gravity was able to pull together the cosmos as it has for 14.5 billion eat.
 
  • #42
@Shri13: Van Deer Waals forces are in consistent. Like gravity, they are week forces, but unlike gravity, they appear and disappear inconsistently. The force of gravity is always proportional to the inverse square if the distance between the two objects and directly porportional to the pruduct of their masses. There's a gravitational constant, but because it is a constant we can just ignore it for now. In regard to subatomic particles, the centripital force of attraction is due to opposite charges, protons and electrons, their inertia and co-interaction keeping them from crashing inward. Lastly, keep in mind that the four great forces of the universe were initially one super force immediately after the Big Bang, and that it was shortly there after that each if the independent forces, one of which was gravity, split off from one another... And that the entropeic nature of the universe is why gravity was able to pull together the cosmos as it has for the past 14.5 billion years.
 
  • #43
The moon orbit is due to centrifugal force.
An apparent force that acts outward on a body moving around a center, arising from the body's inertia.
 
  • #44
Jon B said:
The moon orbit is due to centrifugal force.
- In the inertial frame of reference there is no centrifugal force on the Moon.

- In the rotating rest frame of the moon, the moon is not orbiting anything, but simply at rest.

So explaining "orbits" with "centrifugal force" doesn't make sense in either frame of reference.
 
  • #45
Okay, try this: If the Moon was not racing around the Earth it would succumb to the combined gravitational forces of Earth and Moon and crash.
 
  • #46
Jon B said:
Okay, try this: If the Moon was not racing around the Earth it would succumb to the combined gravitational forces of Earth and Moon and crash.

Without going into the merits of your post...

Shri13's post #40 was an off-topic piggy-back and should probably have been allowed to wither on the vine.
 
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