Ok...I have one damn problem left, and I cant get it for the life of me.Use the data of Table 7.3 to find the point between Earth and the Sun at which an object can be placed so that the net gravitational force exerted by Earth and Sun on this object is zero. (the distance between earth and sun is 1.496x10^11 fyi)...help please??
3/29/2006 5:13:04 PM
what's in Table 7.3?
3/29/2006 5:39:19 PM
the distances of different planets from the sun, masses and radii......so...i suppose if you need those for earth/the sun i could give those....earth: mass (5.98x10^24kg) radius (6.38x10^6) period (3.156x10^7)sun: mass (1.991x10^30) radius (6.96x10^8)
3/29/2006 5:45:46 PM
there should be a formula (in the book) that equates gravitational force to distance, radius, mass, etc.the forces are equalmake one distance "X", and the other "1.496x10^11 - X"solve for X
3/29/2006 9:37:24 PM
3/29/2006 9:46:16 PM
And remember that you're considering these objects as particles, so the force will act from the center of the object.
3/29/2006 9:49:26 PM
3/29/2006 10:25:14 PM
I still have this one left if anyone can help me.. Biochem has fried my brain An air puck of mass 0.23 kg is tied to a string and allowed to revolve in a circle of radius 1.0 m on a frictionless horizontal table. The other end of the string passes through a hole in the center of the table, and a mass of 1.2 kg is tied to it (Fig. P7.25). The suspended mass remains in equilibrium while the puck on the tabletop revolves. What is the tension in the string?(b) What is the force causing the centripetal acceleration on the puck? N (c) What is the speed of the puck? m/s
3/30/2006 12:06:25 PM
part b is the same answer as a gravity * mass of the hanging weight
3/30/2006 12:20:40 PM
Thanks.. I knew it had to be simple and I just couldn't see it for trying!
3/30/2006 1:30:42 PM
heymass of the sun is in the book, right?i'm at work and don't have my book withcan someone post that for me?
3/30/2006 1:47:43 PM
3/30/2006 4:35:08 PM
3/30/2006 4:54:39 PM