jsmith613
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why is gravity, on earth, approximatley 9.81 m/s2.
What causes it to be so?
thanks
What causes it to be so?
thanks
jsmith613 said:why is gravity, on earth, approximatley 9.81 m/s2.
What causes it to be so?
thanks
zhermes said:Well, its an observational property of all matter in the universe that it attracts other matter by an equation which Newton found (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton's_law_of_universal_gravitation)
<br /> F_G = G \frac{m_1 m_2}{r^2}<br />
For two masses (m1 and m2), separated by a distance (r); given 'Newton's gravitational constant' (G).
Now, according to one of Newton's other laws
<br /> F = ma<br />
If you combine these equations you find out that the acceleration due to gravity only depends on the mass of the Earth and your distance away from its center... if you plug in the values you get ~9.81 m/s^2
Not quite; it doesn't matter how large one body's mass is---because it cancels out in the equations, it has no influence on the acceleration.jsmith613 said:So essetisally, because the Earth's mass is so large, the mass of the other objects is next to insignificant.
That's exactly right. The Earth's radius is something like 6000km, while the highest mountain is only about 10km... so the change in gravity will be about 0.3% (or something like that, so very small).jsmith613 said:Because the value of r is also large, changing the value by an amount will make little differernce.
Yeah, if you plug in the usual values, that's what you get.jsmith613 said:Therefore will the value of gravity be in the range 9 - 10
Not quite; it doesn't matter how large one body's mass is---because it cancels out in the equations, it has no influence on the acceleration.
russ_watters said:No. That equation gives you the force. Acceleration is a=f/m so the larger the mass, the smaller the acceleration for the same force.
jsmith613 said:Does that not mean, therefore that Gravity should change based on force and mass for each object, if we assume a = f/m
russ_watters said:No. That equation gives you the force. Acceleration is a=f/m so the larger the mass, the smaller the acceleration for the same force.
Note that Russ said 'for the same force'. The force of gravity does change based on the mass. In fact the force is proportional to the mass, which makes the acceleration of a free falling object due to gravity the same for all masses, since the mass drops out of the equation.jsmith613 said:Does that not mean, therefore that Gravity should change based on force and mass for each object, if we assume a = f/m
gravitational force, yes: that's what you measure with a bathroom scale.jsmith613 said:Does that not mean, therefore that Gravity should change based on force and mass for each object, if we assume a = f/m
Now to calculate the acceleration of Earth you divide the force by Earth's mass
a = \frac{F}{M}
which is
a = G\frac{m}{r^2}
jsmith613 said:Why is this so,
Drakkith said:Does all this mean that no matter the mass of the smaller object, it will always have the same acceleration?
zhermes said:Yes it does.
Yes! That's exactly it.Drakkith said:Is this because as the mass increases, the attraction due to gravity increases as well, but so does the amount of force required to move it? I think that's right, just wanting to make sure.