Problem concernng Newton's Law of Gravitation

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Benzoate
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Homework Statement


Four particles, each of mass m , are situated at the vertices of a regular tetrahedron of the side a. Find the gravitational force exerted on anyone of the particles by the other three.


Homework Equations




F=m*M*G/R^2

The Attempt at a Solution



Since the mass of the four particles are equivalent, F=m^2*G/a^2. Each of the particles lie at each of the four vertices of the base of the tetrahedron. I assumed the base of the tetrahedron is a square since the polyhedron is a regular tetrahedron. particle one exerts a force on each of the remaining three particles that lie on the vertices. So I will write out 3 forces

F(1,2)=m^2*G/a^2

F(1,3)=m^2*G/2a^2

F(1,4)= m^2*G/a^2

F(total)=F(1,2)+F(1,3)+F(1,4)= 5/2*(m^2/a^2).

The book says that the total Force is sqrt(6)*m^2*G/a^2. What did I do wrong? I think the calculation for my net Force was slightly closed to the books answer, I happened to be off by .05 decimal places.
 
on Phys.org
Is my problem understandable to anyone?
 
Benzoate said:
What is wrong with my Force equations?

The total force is the sum of three vectors. These three vectors are the same length but don't point in the same direction.
 
I assumed the base of the tetrahedron is a square

the base is a triangle