Social Sciences, asked by saisrikar7654, 10 months ago

derive for gravitation​

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Answered by paramjyotisingp2rky7
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Derivation of Gravitational Force formula from the Newton's universal Law of Gravitation. Say FG is the force of gravitational attraction between any two objects, m1 is the mass of one object, ... d is the distance between the centers of the two objects.

Gravitational Force Formula

The universe has numerous forces, a lot of pushes and pulls. One is always pushing or pulling something, even if only the ground. In Physics, there are actually only four essential forces from which everything new is derived: the gravitational force, the electromagnetic force, the strong force and the weak force.

Newton’s law of gravity says that the gravitational force amidst two objects is proportionate to the result of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance amongst them. All bodies, counting you, are tugging on every other body in the whole universe! This is termed as Newton’s Universal Law of Gravitation.  

The universal law of gravitation states that:  

Every object in the universe pulls every other object with a force which is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.

The Gravitational force formula is given by  

F=\frac{Gm_{1}m_{2}}{r^{2}}

Where,

G is universal gravitational constant,

m1 and m2 are mass of bodies

r is the radius between the two masses

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