Gravitational attraction question

In summary, the gravitational force between the Earth and the Moon can be calculated using the formula Fg = Gm1m2 / r^2, where m1 and m2 are the masses of the Earth and the Moon respectively, and r is the distance between their centers. In order to find the point at which the force of gravitational attraction is canceled, a new variable r1 is introduced to represent the distance from Earth's center to that point. By setting the forces exerted by the Earth and the Moon equal to each other and solving for r1, the distance can be found. It is important to note that the mass used in the equation can be arbitrary, as it will cancel out in the final equation.
  • #1
inner08
49
0
The mass of the Moon is 7.35 * 10^22kg. At some point between Earth and the Moon, the force of Earth's gravitational attraction on an object is canceled by the Moon's force of gravitational attraction. If the distance between Earth and the Moon (centre to centre) is 3.84 * 10^5 km, calculate where this will occur, relative to Earth.

This is what I've done so far..not sure if I'm on the right path. If I am..i'm not sure if that is my answer or if there is more to do.

m1 = Mass of Moon
m2 = Mass of Earth

Fg = Gm1m2 / r^2
= (6.67*10^-11)(7.35*10^22)(5.98*10^24) / (3.84 * 10^8)^2
= 1.98 * 10^20

Does that seem right?


Also, in a different problem. I had to find the centripetal acceleration (which I did). Now if I have to express it in terms of g (acceleration due to Earth's gravity), would I use the formula mg = ma...then g = the answer I got for the centripetal acceleration? Not sure if that makes any sense...
 
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  • #2
inner08 said:
Fg = Gm1m2 / r^2
= (6.67*10^-11)(7.35*10^22)(5.98*10^24) / (3.84 * 10^8)^2
= 1.98 * 10^20

Does that seem right?
It may be easier to do this by 'proportions' or field strength. If I say that at the equilibirum point, the gravitation field strength are equal (but opposite) thus;

[tex]\frac{GM_{m}}{r^2} = \frac{GM_{e}}{R^2}[/tex]
Where r is the distance from the moon and R is the distance from the earth

Can you follow?:smile:
 
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  • #3
inner08 said:
m1 = Mass of Moon
m2 = Mass of Earth

Fg = Gm1m2 / r^2
= (6.67*10^-11)(7.35*10^22)(5.98*10^24) / (3.84 * 10^8)^2
= 1.98 * 10^20

Does that seem right?
No. You calculated the gravitational force that the moon and Earth exert on each other, which is not what was asked. Instead, imagine an object of mass M a distance D from the Earth's center. Find the gravitational force on the mass due to (1) the earth, and (2) the moon. Set those forces equal and solve for the distance.


I had to find the centripetal acceleration (which I did). Now if I have to express it in terms of g (acceleration due to Earth's gravity), would I use the formula mg = ma...then g = the answer I got for the centripetal acceleration?

The acceleration due to gravity at the Earth's surface is g = 9.8 m/s^2. If you have some acceleration measured in m/s^2 and you want to express it in terms of "g's", then just divide by 9.8. (In other words, an acceleration of 9.8 m/s^2 equals 1 "g", an acceleration of 19.6 m/s^2 equals 2 g's, etc.) Depending on the exact problem, you may be able to find your answer directly (algebraically) in terms of g without doing any arithmetic.
 
  • #4
What you have done is most likely wrong. If I understood correctly, the problem asks for a distance from Earth (or it's centre) to a point at which the Earth's and the moon's gravitational forces cancel out.
The formula you used ( Gm1m2 / r^2 ) clearly gives you just a force, not any distance, so that is already wrong.

What you should do is define a new variable, say r1, which is the distance to the point of equilibrium from Earth's centre. Then the distance to that point from the moon's centre is r-r1.

You know the forces are opposite by direction and equal by force at that point (r1).
You also know how to calculate gravitational forces, so all you have to do is calculate both attraction forces from the Earth (using distance r1) and from the Moon (using distance r-r1). They are equal, so you can write an equation, and find r1 from it.

Also note, that you will have to define some mass for the virtual object at the point (to use gravitation law). There is no problem with that, because it appears in both attraction forces and thus will cancel out in the equation.

Edit: beaten by two posters :)
 
  • #5
Thanks for the replies. Let me know if I understood this correctly.

First, I calculate due to the earth:
Fge = (6.67*10^-11)(5.98*10^24)(1)/ (3.84 * 10^8)

Then I calculate for the moon:
Fgm = (6.67*10^-11)(7.35*10^22)(1) / (3.84 * 10^5 - r1)

Then I set Fge = Fgm and solve for r1?

Thanks for your patience!
 
  • #6
inner08 said:
First, I calculate due to the earth:
Fge = (6.67*10^-11)(5.98*10^24)(1)/ (3.84 * 10^8)

Then I calculate for the moon:
Fgm = (6.67*10^-11)(7.35*10^22)(1) / (3.84 * 10^5 - r1)

Then I set Fge = Fgm and solve for r1?
Almost there. In the expression for Fge, the distance should be r1.
 
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  • #7
Ok, I did that and got r1 = 3.79 * 10^15m. That is hopefully right.

Also, just for my information, if ever I need to find the gravitational force on the mass for a planet or some object, all I need to do is use 1kg as the second mass?
 
  • #8
inner08 said:
if ever I need to find the gravitational force on the mass for a planet or some object, all I need to do is use 1kg as the second mass?

Gravitational potential is defined as the force per unit mass exerted on an object placed at point r in the field. It is given by

[tex]g = -\frac{GM}{r^2}[/tex]

and as units of [itex]N\cdot kg^{-1}[/itex] or [itex]m\cdot s^{-2}[/itex].

Therefore, if you want to find the force exerted on an object, just multiply the gravitational field strength by the mass of that object resulting in the formula;

[tex]F = -\frac{GMm}{r^2}[/tex]

-Hope this helps :smile:
-Hoot
 
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  • #9
inner08 said:
Ok, I did that and got r1 = 3.79 * 10^15m. That is hopefully right.
Better check that. Since the entire earth-moon distance is only about 3.84 * 10^8m, how can that answer be right?


Also, just for my information, if ever I need to find the gravitational force on the mass for a planet or some object, all I need to do is use 1kg as the second mass?
Depends on the problem. In this problem, since the "test mass" is arbitrary, I would have used "M". It cancels from your final equation. (Using 1 kg is OK in this example, but it's better to realize that no actual mass is needed.)
 
  • #10
Thanks for all your help/patience guys! Really appreciated!
 
  • #11
Hootenanny said:
Gravitational potential is defined as the force per unit mass exerted on an object placed at point r in the field. It is given by

[tex]g = -\frac{GM}{r^2}[/tex]

and as units of [itex]N\cdot kg^{-1}[/itex] or [itex]m\cdot s^{-2}[/itex].
It's better to call that gravitational field strength. Gravitational potential is usually defined as the gravitational potential energy per unit mass.
 
  • #12
Doc Al said:
It's better to call that gravitational field strength. Gravitational potential is usually defined as the gravitational potential energy per unit mass.
Indeed it is, I tend to use the too interchangably :frown: much to the frustration of my tutors:redface: . I use the correct formulae for the situation but tend to mix my terms
 
  • #13
If the point at which this happens is S metres from M
If the Earth's and moons gravitational forces cancel each other out, then:

(Gm)/(r-S)^2 = (GM)/ r^2

rearranging gives:

S = r - (mr^2)/M

where r is the distance between the moon and the earth
M is the mass of the earth
m is the mass of the moon
G is the universal gravitational constant (6.67x10^-11)

I plugged in the numbers (several times!) and ended up with 3.4x10^8m
Does this sound right?
matt
 
  • #14
maltesers said:
I the numbers (several times!) and ended up with 3.4x10^8m
Does this sound right?
matt

That looks good to me. :smile:
 
  • #15
maltesers, that does not look right. I know I am not a tutor, or even very good at physics, but I can see right away that that answer is impossible.

The distance from the Earth to the moon is 3.84 x 105. The answer you have is greater than that.

If I am wrong could someone please explain where I made the mistake.
 
  • #16
randomwinner said:
maltesers, that does not look right. I know I am not a tutor, or even very good at physics, but I can see right away that that answer is impossible.

The distance from the Earth to the moon is 3.84 x 105. The answer you have is greater than that.

If I am wrong could someone please explain where I made the mistake.

Mind your units.

The distance to the moon varies and is in the range 3.6 to 4 times 108 meters or 105 in km.
 
  • #17
I see now where I went wrong. Thank you for the help.
 
  • #18
When I deduce a value for "r1", must I square root it?
 
  • #19
inner08 said:
Ok, I did that and got r1 = 3.79 * 10^15m. That is hopefully right.

I got the same value but 10^5 m. Now that sounds right.
 
  • #20
inner08 said:
The mass of the Moon is 7.35 * 10^22kg. At some point between Earth and the Moon, the force of Earth's gravitational attraction on an object is canceled by the Moon's force of gravitational attraction. If the distance between Earth and the Moon (centre to centre) is 3.84 * 10^5 km, calculate where this will occur, relative to Earth.

Using the following values:

Gravitational constant = 6.67e-11
Earth mass = 5.98e+24 kg
Earth’s GM = 3.98866e+14
Earth radius = 6.4e+6 meters

Moon’s mass (.0123 * Earth’s 5.98e+24 kg mass) = 7.3554e+22
Moon’s GM = 4.9060518e+12
Moon’s radius = 1.74e+6 meters

Distance between Earth and Moon’s center of mass = 384,000,000 meters (238,606 miles)

Earth’s gravitational attraction on Moon at distance of 345,664,007 meters (which is 54.01000109375 Earth radii) from Earth’s center of mass = .003338249 m/s^2

verified by: a = GM / r^2

(6.67e-11) (5.98e+24 kg) / (345,664,007 meters)^2 = .003338249 m/s^2

Moon’s gravitational attraction on Earth at distance of 38,335,993 meters (which is 22.032179885 Moon radii) from the Moon’s center of mass = .003338249 m/s^2

verified by: a = GM / r^2

(6.67e-11) (7.3554e+22 kg) / (38,335,993 meters)^2 = .003338249 m/s^2

So, at approximately 54.01 Earth radii (345,664,007 meters away from center of Earth) or 22.032 Moon radii (38,335,993 meters from center of Moon), the gravitational attraction on an object via the Earth and via the Moon is virtual unity. The object requires no orbit around the Moon though it does orbit the Earth in sync with the Moon’s cycle of approximately 27.3 days. The object remains in a straight line of sight between the Earth and Moon. For this reason, the object’s Earthly orbital velocity (approximately 921 m/s) will be a lesser velocity than the Moon’s orbital velocity (approximately 1023 m/s). Ordinarily, the closer an object is to the Earth, the greater will be its required orbital velocity, but this unity attraction between Earth and Moon allows the opposite to be true for the object in gravitational unity.
 
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FAQ: Gravitational attraction question

What is gravitational attraction?

Gravitational attraction is the force of attraction that exists between any two objects with mass. It is a fundamental force of nature that causes objects to be drawn towards each other.

What causes gravitational attraction?

Gravitational attraction is caused by the curvature of spacetime caused by the presence of mass. The more massive an object is, the stronger its gravitational pull.

How does distance affect gravitational attraction?

The strength of gravitational attraction decreases as the distance between two objects increases. This is described by the inverse-square law, which states that the force of attraction is inversely proportional to the square of the distance between the objects.

Can gravitational attraction be shielded or blocked?

No, gravitational attraction cannot be shielded or blocked by any known material. It is a universal force that acts on all objects with mass, regardless of any barriers in between them.

How does mass affect gravitational attraction?

The greater the mass of an object, the stronger its gravitational pull. This is why larger and more massive objects, like planets and stars, have a stronger gravitational attraction than smaller objects like rocks or humans.

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