8. Centripetal Forces & Gravitation
Newton's Law of Gravity
- Open QuestionWhat is the ratio of the sun's gravitational force on you to the earth's gravitational force on you?
- Open QuestionA typical adult human has a mass of about 70 kg. (a) What force does a full moon exert on such a human when it is directly overhead with its center 378,000 km away? (b) Compare this force with the force exerted on the human by the earth
- Multiple Choice
Two spheres of mass 300 kg and 500 kg are placed in a line 20 cm apart. If another sphere of mass 200 kg is placed between them, 8 cm from the 300 kg sphere, what is the net gravitational force on the 200 kg sphere?
- Multiple Choice
A 2,000-kg spacecraft is blasting away from the surface of an unknown planet the same size as the Earth. At 1500km above the surface, an instrument onboard reads the gravitational force to be 18000 N. What is the planet's mass?
- Multiple Choice
Two spheres are separated by 10m. If the lighter 40kg sphere feels a gravitational force of 1.6 × 10-9 N, what is the mass of the heavier sphere?
- Open Question
(II) You are explaining to friends why an astronaut feels weightless orbiting the Earth in a space station, and they respond that they thought gravity was just a lot weaker up there. Convince them that it isn’t so by calculating how much weaker (in %) gravity is 380 km above the Earth’s surface.
- Open QuestionThe point masses m and 2m lie along the x-axis, with m at the origin and 2m at x = L. A third point mass M is moved along the x-axis. (a) At what point is the net gravitational force on M due to the other two masses equal to zero?
- Open QuestionFind the magnitude and direction of the net gravitational force on mass A due to masses B and C in Fig. E13.6. Each mass is 2.00 kg.
- Open QuestionTwo uniform spheres, each with mass M and radius R, touch each other. What is the magnitude of their gravitational force of attraction?