- #1
inner08
- 49
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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...
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...