Universal Gravitation Constant - HELP

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John231
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Universal Gravitation Constant - HELP!

Hello, I'm a little confused...

What is the difference between the "Constant of Universal Gravitation" and the "Gravitational Force"? I know that there is a radius between two or more objects like the Earth and the Moon and bla bla bla... But the thing that I want to know is the "Constant of Universal Gravitation". Is it the force between the two objects??

I would be grateful if someone could answer my question!

Thanks!
 
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Force between moon Earth and blah blah is

## F=\frac{Gm1m2}{d2} ##

F is the force. G is the universal gravitational constant
 
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John231 said:
What is the difference between the "Constant of Universal Gravitation" and the "Gravitational Force"?
Force is variable (something you compute) depending on the masses and the distance between the masses. The constant is, well a constant.

John231 said:
But the thing that I want to know is the "Constant of Universal Gravitation". Is it the force between the two objects??
No, it's a universal constant, G ≈ 6.67 x 10-11 Nm2/kg2. See Gravity (HyperPhysics) and/or Gravitational constant.
 
John231 said:
Hello, I'm a little confused...

What is the difference between the "Constant of Universal Gravitation" and the "Gravitational Force"? I know that there is a radius between two or more objects like the Earth and the Moon and bla bla bla... But the thing that I want to know is the "Constant of Universal Gravitation". Is it the force between the two objects??

I would be grateful if someone could answer my question!

Thanks!
Newton's law of gravitation essentially says that gravitational force between two bodies is proportional to the product of their masses divided by the square of the separation between their centres of mass (mM/r^2). G is the proportionality constant relating the magnitude of the force to mM/r^2. In math terms, G is equal to the Force divided by (mM/r^2).

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