asked 143k views
4 votes
When Earth and the Moon are separated by a

distance of 3.84 × 10^8 meters, the magnitude of
the gravitational force of attraction between
them is 2.0 × 10^20 newtons. What would be the
magnitude of this gravitational force of attraction
if Earth and the Moon were separated by a
distance of 1.92 × 10^8 meters?
(1) 5.0 × 10^19 N (3) 4.0 × 10^20 N
(2) 2.0 × 10^20 N (4) 8.0 × 10^20 N

asked
User MiniGod
by
7.8k points

2 Answers

5 votes

The strength of the gravitational forces between two masses is
inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them.

So if you change the distance to

(1.92 x 10⁸) / (3.84 x 10⁸) = 1/2

of what it is now, then you would change the force to

1 / (1/2)² = 4

of what it is now.

(4) x (2 x 10²⁰) = 8.0 x 10²⁰ newtons .

answered
User Mike McMahon
by
7.6k points
7 votes
Using the Universal Gratitation Law, we have:


F= (MmG)/(d^2) \\ MmG=2*10^(20)*(3.84*10^8)^2 \\ MmG=29.4912*10^36

Again applying the formula in the new situation, comes:


F= (MmG)/(d^2) \\ F= (29.4912*10^36)/((1.92*10^8)^2) \\ \boxed {F=8*10^(20)}

Number 4

If you notice any mistake in my english, please let me know, because i am not native.
answered
User Tangurena
by
8.1k points

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