What is the Weight of an Astronaut on a Shuttle 518917m Above Earth?

  • Thread starter Thread starter mohlam12
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Gravity
AI Thread Summary
An astronaut weighing 900N on Earth would have a mass of approximately 91.84 kg. Calculations show that the gravitational acceleration at 518,917 meters above Earth is about 8.43 m/s², leading to a weight of 774N if not in free fall. However, since the shuttle is in orbit, both the astronaut and the shuttle experience free fall, resulting in a weight of zero. The discussion highlights confusion over the interpretation of the question regarding the astronaut's weight in a non-orbital versus orbital context. Ultimately, the consensus is that the astronaut would be weightless while in orbit.
mohlam12
Messages
153
Reaction score
0
we have a shuttle in space taht is 518917 m above earth, if an astrinaut weight 900N, how much he will weight on the shuttle?

here is what i did so far,

the gravity on the shuttle = (6.67E-11* 6E24)/(518917+6.37E6)^2= 8.43m/ss


6.37E6 is the radius of Earth in m
6.67E-11 is the universal gravitational system
6E24 is mass of Earth in Kg

now his weight on Earth is 900N --> 91.84 Kg

so in the shuttle he weights 91.84 / (9.8/8.43) = 79 Kg
i don't think that s right because if he weight 79Kg he is not going to fly on the shuttle, and i think a gravity of 8.43 m/ss is too much for a shuttle that is 519 Km above Earth ??
 
Physics news on Phys.org
mohlam12 said:
we have a shuttle in space taht is 518917 m above earth, if an astrinaut weight 900N, how much he will weight on the shuttle?

here is what i did so far,

the gravity on the shuttle = (6.67E-11* 6E24)/(518917+6.37E6)^2= 8.43m/ss


6.37E6 is the radius of Earth in m
6.67E-11 is the universal gravitational system
6E24 is mass of Earth in Kg

now his weight on Earth is 900N --> 91.84 Kg

so in the shuttle he weights 91.84 / (9.8/8.43) = 79 Kg
i don't think that s right because if he weight 79Kg he is not going to fly on the shuttle, and i think a gravity of 8.43 m/ss is too much for a shuttle that is 519 Km above Earth ??

You've calculated the mass. You've calculated g on the shuttle. Weight is just mg=91.84*8.43=774N
 
Everything is correct except for one thing.

kg is a measure of mass. Your mass doesn't change regardless of where you are. Your final answer has to be in Newtons.

In other words, the original mass (about 91.77 kg) times the gravity on the shuttle.
 
I think your weight would be 0. You'd only have weight if the shuttle could hover without orbiting at that altitude. Then you could compute the weight (w=ma) a = GM/(earth radius + altitude)^2 . But if the shuttle is orbiting, and you're in it, you're both in freefall and you are weightless. Verify this by stepping on a scale.
 
but don't u think that for a shuttle that is 514 km above Earth should have a gravity less than 8.43 m/s/s ?
 
No,why...?Your calculations seem correct.And yes,the weight is 0,due to free fall...

Daniel.
 
True, since he's not applying a force against anything (both he and the shuttle are 'falling' at the same rate).

But, unless it's a trick question, the 774 N is what I think the question wants.
 
tony873004 said:
I think your weight would be 0. You'd only have weight if the shuttle could hover without orbiting at that altitude. Then you could compute the weight (w=ma) a = GM/(earth radius + altitude)^2 . But if the shuttle is orbiting, and you're in it, you're both in freefall and you are weightless. Verify this by stepping on a scale.

I don't think the question is asking that. It doesn't give the shuttle as being in orbit. I think it's simply asking the force exerted by the Earth on the astronaut.
 
Then it must be a heck of a poor wording from the author...Any normal person would interpret "shuttle in space that is 518917 m above earth" as a shuttle in free fall."how much he will weight on the shuttle ??"...:wink:

Daniel.
 
  • #10
learningphysics said:
I don't think the question is asking that. It doesn't give the shuttle as being in orbit. I think it's simply asking the force exerted by the Earth on the astronaut.

the shuttle is in orbit yeah :| so?
 
Last edited:
  • #11
So,according to common sense and Newtonian physics,the weight is ZERO...

Daniel.
 
Back
Top