Stephanus said:
But what about "g", how can we derive G? G is derived from Newton constant, right? Depending of the Earth Mass, G is 9.8 m/sec2
No, it is not. Let's work through this problem from the top.
The general form of the equation for the force of gravitation is: F = GM
1M
2/r
2
This means that the force, which is the same magnitude for both objects, is proportional to the mass of the objects, and inversely proportional to the distance between them.
The acceleration of each object depends upon the force applied divided by the mass, or: A = F/M
Rearranging the equation gives us : F = MA
Since gravity is a force, we can substitute MA into the original equation for gravitation: MA = GM
1M
2/r
2
Now, notice that we have 2 different masses on the right side. That means we have to choose which object we are talking about. Let's find the acceleration for M
2 and say it is a 100 kg block and M
1 is the Earth.
So we have: M
2A = GM
1M
2/r
2
Since M
2 appears on both sides of the equation, we can cancel the terms, leaving: A = GM
1/r
2
Now, I want you to take note of the significance that the mass of the object we are considering
has been removed from the equation. This immediately tells us that the acceleration of M
2 under the force of gravity does NOT change if you vary the mass of M
2. But it doesn't tell us why. Let's continue and see if we can find out.
So, we have: A = GM
1/r
2
We have solid numbers for both G and M
1, leaving us with the only variable, r. Let's say r is the average distance from the center of the Earth to sea level. Our equation becomes: A = (6.67 x 10
-11)(5.97 x 10
24)/(6.37 x 10
6)
2
Which becomes: A = 9.81 m/s
2
Okay! So we have our acceleration of M
2! But how does that relate to g? Well... it
IS g! (g is defined as the acceleration of an object due to Earth's gravity)
So we've shown above that the mass of the object M
2 does NOT affect the acceleration of the object, but let's look further into that and figure out why.Remember that A = F/M. We have A and we have the mass of the object (100 kg), but let's rearrange the equation real quick.
F = MA
F = 9.81*100
F = 981 Newtons
So we know that if an object of 100 kg accelerates at 9.81 m/s
2, then it subjected to a force of 981 Newtons. Let's go back to the general form of gravitation and plug in our numbers.
F = GM
1M
2/r
2
F = (6.67 x 10
-11)(5.97 x 10
24)(100)/(6.37 x 10
6)
2
F = 981 Newtons!
It's the same as what we found before!
What happens if we double the mass of M
2? Per the gravitational equation: F = (6.67 x 10
-11)(5.97 x 10
24)(200)/(6.37 x 10
6)
2
F = 1962 Newtons, or double what it was before.
Now, shouldn't double the force accelerate the object at twice the rate? Let's find out.
A = F/M
A = 1962/200
A = 9.81 m/s
2!
No! The increased force does NOT cause an increase in acceleration! This is because in order to double the force, we had to double the mass, which means the object has more inertia and will take twice the amount of force to accelerate at the same rate.
In other words, changing the mass of M
2 (whatever object you are dropping) has NO effect on the acceleration of that object under gravity. Note that nowhere did we calculate the acceleration
for the Earth. That's the key here. Doubling the mass of M
2 WILL change the rate at which the Earth accelerates towards M
2. In fact, doubling the mass will double the acceleration. The Earth is just so massive that we don't generally take the acceleration of the Earth into account since it is very, very small compared to the 9.81 m/s
2 an object at sea level experiences.
For comparison, the acceleration of the Earth under the influence of a 200 kg object placed 6.67 x 10
6 meters away from the center of the Earth is:
A = 1962 / (5.97 x 10
24).
(Remember that the force from M
1 on M
2, 1962 Newtons, is equal in magnitude to the force from M
2 on M
1, so our 1962 Newtons from the previous equation is also the force exerted on the Earth by the 200 kg object.)
The equation becomes: A = 3.29 x 10
-22 m/s
2
That's a difference of more than twenty orders of magnitude. Even increasing the mass of the second object a billion-fold would not have a noticeable effect on the Earth. (A then equals 3.29 x 10
-13, which is still terribly small) The acceleration of the Earth under any conceivable object short of astronomical bodies is completely and utterly insignificant.