Under what condition do the values of gravitational force and gravitational constant become same or equal?
Answers
Answered by
63
Answer:
The values of gravitational force and gravitational constant become same or equal when product of masses involved equals the square of distance between them.
Answered by
3
Answer:
When the masses of the body between which the force is been calculated are 1 Kg and they are at a distance of 1 m from each other. Then, the value of gravitational force and gravitational constant becomes same.
Explanation:
The gravitational force is given by, GM
where G is the gravitational constant.
M and m are the masses of the bodies involved and r is the distance between them.
- Any two mass-containing objects are attracted to one another by the gravitational force.
- Because it consistently attempts to pull masses together rather than pushing them apart, the gravitational force is known as attractive.
- The following are some instances of the power of gravity: the energy holding the gases inside the sun. the power behind a ball's descent after being thrown into the air. the force that makes an automobile coast downhill even when the gas is not depressed.
- The proportionality constant utilised in Newton's Law of Gravitation is the gravitational constant.
- The universal gravitational constant, designated by G and measured in Nm^2/kg^2, is the force that attracts any two unit masses separated by a unit distance. It's value is 6.67× 10^(-11) Nm^2/Kg^2
- So, when the masses involved are of 1 kg and the distance is 1 m between them, then, the gravitational force will be equal to the gravitational constant .
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