Force of gravity at quantum level is indetermined?
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Newton's law of Universal Gravitation states that any two bodies in the universe attract each other with a force that is directly proportional to the product of their masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.
F=GmMR2F=GmMR2
FF is the force of gravity.
mm is the light mass.
MM is the heavy mass.
RR is the distance.
GG is a gravitational constant = 6.67384 ×× 10-11 m3kg-1 s-2.
From the above mentioned equation the force of gravity FF becomes stronger if any of the mass increases, since nerds love to treat elementary particles (they have mass) as point-like if we reduce the distance RR to 00 we will get F=∞F=∞(sound weird).
F=GmMR2F=GmMR2
FF is the force of gravity.
mm is the light mass.
MM is the heavy mass.
RR is the distance.
GG is a gravitational constant = 6.67384 ×× 10-11 m3kg-1 s-2.
From the above mentioned equation the force of gravity FF becomes stronger if any of the mass increases, since nerds love to treat elementary particles (they have mass) as point-like if we reduce the distance RR to 00 we will get F=∞F=∞(sound weird).
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F=GmMR2F=GmMR2 FF is the force of gravity. mm is the light mass.
MM is the heavy mass.
RR is the distance. GG is a gravitational constant = 6.67384 ×× 10-11 m3kg-1 s-2.
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