Physics, asked by deepakkumar4328, 1 year ago

How does acceleration due to gravity varies at the equator?

Answers

Answered by smartharsh523
1

Answer:

Variation of 'g' due to shape of the earth. Thus, the acceleration due to gravity at a place is inversely proportional to the square of the distance of the point from the centre of the earth. ... Hence acceleration due to gravity is maximum at the poles and minimum at the equator.

I think it's helpful for you

thanks #_brainly_mate

Pleazzz mark me as brainliest


smartharsh523: pleazz mark me as brainliest
smartharsh523: hi
smartharsh523: hlo
Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

The acceleration of an object changes with altitude. The change in gravitational acceleration with distance from the centre of Earth follows an inverse-square law. This means that gravitational acceleration is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the centre of Earth.

Similar questions