if everything in the universe attracts everything else why do we not attract each other
Answers
Answered by
44
Actually we do, but the forces are so weak that we don't feel the acceleration.
For example :
Let us assume 2 people separated by 1mm of distance, i.e. 10^-3 m.
And let their masses be 100kg each.
Then,
F = G × M1 × M2 / R^2
F = 6.6 × 10^-34 × 100 × 100 × 10^6
F = 6.6 × 10^-24 N
Therefore the acceleration is: F/M
i.e. 6.6×10^-26 N
Hence the force is not experienced by us.
Hope it helps you and please hit thanks and mark brainiest if you wish......
For example :
Let us assume 2 people separated by 1mm of distance, i.e. 10^-3 m.
And let their masses be 100kg each.
Then,
F = G × M1 × M2 / R^2
F = 6.6 × 10^-34 × 100 × 100 × 10^6
F = 6.6 × 10^-24 N
Therefore the acceleration is: F/M
i.e. 6.6×10^-26 N
Hence the force is not experienced by us.
Hope it helps you and please hit thanks and mark brainiest if you wish......
perman13:
Hello.....thanks a lot but this is kinda too much for my class ..☺️
Answered by
4
Answer:
answer
Explanation:
we do attract each other but the force is so poor that we do not feel the attraction
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