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Came across this forum while searching the net for help. It's great to have a forum dedicated to physics.
So hi to everyone :)
Now to business.
I'm stuck with this question.
If you weigh 660N on the earth, what would you weigh on the surface of a neutron star that has the same mass as our sun and a diameter of 22.0km ?
Take the mass of the sun to be m_s = 1.99×10^30kg, the gravitational constant to be G = 6.67×10^-11 N m^2/kg^2, and the acceleration due to gravity at the Earth's surface to be g = 9.810 m/s^2.
My working out:
*r_n = radius of neutron
*m_n = mass of neutron
*m_me = mass of me
r_n = 11000m
m_n = 1.99 x 10^30kg
m_me = w/g = 660/9.810 = 67.27828746kg
= (G * m_n * m_me) / r_n^2
= (6.67x10^-11 * 1.99x10^30 * 67.27828746) / 11000^2
= 7.380205N
----
Now I'm told that the answer is wrong.
So can someone tell me where I went wrong ?
Thanks in advance.
So hi to everyone :)
Now to business.
I'm stuck with this question.
If you weigh 660N on the earth, what would you weigh on the surface of a neutron star that has the same mass as our sun and a diameter of 22.0km ?
Take the mass of the sun to be m_s = 1.99×10^30kg, the gravitational constant to be G = 6.67×10^-11 N m^2/kg^2, and the acceleration due to gravity at the Earth's surface to be g = 9.810 m/s^2.
My working out:
*r_n = radius of neutron
*m_n = mass of neutron
*m_me = mass of me
r_n = 11000m
m_n = 1.99 x 10^30kg
m_me = w/g = 660/9.810 = 67.27828746kg
= (G * m_n * m_me) / r_n^2
= (6.67x10^-11 * 1.99x10^30 * 67.27828746) / 11000^2
= 7.380205N
----
Now I'm told that the answer is wrong.
So can someone tell me where I went wrong ?
Thanks in advance.
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