Posted on 11/02/2011 3:14:29 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Forgive my advanced ignorance, but doesnt the mass have to rotate to induce the gravity field? Or have I drowned in a sea of sci-fi hog swill.
Regards
A variation on that concept has been suggested as a means of altering the trajectories of asteroids that appear to be on earth-colliding trajectories.
Negative on the rotation.
That’s why it’s called science “fiction”.
Thank you.
The clue was in the name I suppose!
Regards.
Negative. All mass has the same reaction to gravitational forces, inertia and force are linear. 1000 lb takes more to get moving than 100 lb, but there IS more to get it moving.
At the hammer and feather scale it is so minute to be almost ridiculous, but think of it this way. If you could stop the Earth and Moon from rotating and place a feather the same distance from Earth as the Moon, I guarantee that we will collide with the Moon first.
Gravity is probably the best know yet least understood force in nature.
We think of people on the space station as being weightless but that’s really just an effect of the free fall they’re in. I think I read that the gravitational pull at that distance from the earth’s surface is less than 1% less than it is at sea level.
To avoid any complications due to different compositions, instead of a feather use a small iron ball of the same mass, and the USS Missouri, also generally made of iron.
Suspend them each one mile above the surface of the moon.
Each is composed of a collection of iron atoms.
The gravitational attraction between each atom of iron and the moon is the same, thus each atom of iron (assuming all of the same isotope) will accelerate towards the moon at the same rate.
Therefore, since the featherweight piece of iron and the Missouri are both merely composed of many atoms of iron, though in different numbers, accelerating at the same rate, “in formation”, they will both hit the moon at the same time.
This holds for any distance from the moon.
The gravitational attraction between two objects is proportional to the product of the masses of the two objects divided by the square of the distance between the two objects.
Assume, to avoid having to do triple integrals, all mass of the earth is concentrated at a very dense point at the center of the earth, surrounded by a massless, 4000-mile-radius shell that we stand on.
We are thus separated from the mass of the earth by 4000 miles, which, squared, has a magnitude of 16000000.
The orbit of the ISS has an average altitude of about 225 miles.
It, then, is about 4225 miles from the mass of the earth; 4225 squared is about 17850000.
Therefore, the gravitational pull of the earth at the altitude of the space station is 16000000/17850000 relative to that on earth, or roughly 90%.
Even if you assume the far half of the earth doesn’t exist because the “1 over r-squared” term makes it less important and use a radius of 2000 miles rather than 4000, that still puts the earth’s gravitational attraction on the ISS equal to about 80% of that on the surface of the earth.
LOL I’ll take your word for it. I love the science but really suck at the math.
Let's try math, instead of handwaving. We wish to determine the acceleration due to gravity acting upon an object as a function of its proximity to some other object. The two objects are (let us say) a hammer, and the moon. The each have mass Mh and Mm. According to Newton, a force acting on a mass M causes acceleration.
F=m*a
The gravitational force between two massive objects can be computed
Fg = G*(M1*M2)/ R2
where "R" is the distance between them. So, the gravitational acceleration of a hammer falling on the moon may be calculated:
Fg = G*(Mm*Mh)/ R2 = Mh*a
Note that Mh cancels out of this equation. Acceleration of an object (a hammer) due to the gravitational attraction of another object (the moon) is not a function of the first object's (the hammer) mass.
I’m impressed.
I knew what the equations were, but lacked the ambition to actually “typeset” them in HTML.
“Typesetting” them is the only way I know of to make them readable. My knowledge of HTML is really quite limited.
I guess < sub > and < super > handles most of it.
That, and ambition.
Really, so Jupiter and Earth have the same pull on the sun in your world.
You only did half of the equation.
If gravity is as you say, why do object accelerate faster in a fall on Earth than they do on the moon.
As in your example, the Earth and the Moon are just groupings of individual atoms right?
Again, you are only doing half of the equation.
Indeed, it is impossible to find zero gravity anywhere matter exists, but it is possible to find points and conditions of balanced gravity, which have the same obervable result.
Lately I’ve been wondering about the concept of true motionlessness. I wonder if its even possible in expanding space where all things are moving at incredible speeds.
Objects accelerate faster in a fall on Earth than they do on the Moon because Earth is bigger than the Moon. Work the equations for yourself. Substitute the mass of Earth, Jupiter, another hammer, whatever you like. You can solve for the acceleration towards any of these.
Gravitational acceleration towards any object X is a function of the mass of that object and the distance from that object, as I showed upthread.
Don't wave your hands, do the math.
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