Top Posters
Since Sunday
New Topic  
fjohn14 fjohn14
wrote...
Posts: 11
Rep: 0 0
10 years ago
Just need some help here.
Read 280 times
2 Replies
Replies
Answer accepted by topic starter
mhughes2322mhughes2322
wrote...
Posts: 3
Rep: 0 0
10 years ago
Sign in or Sign up in seconds to unlock everything for free
This verified answer contains over 130 words.
1

Related Topics

wrote...
10 years ago
The earth's pull on an object is inversely proportional to the square of the object's distance from the *center* of the earth.

Sitting here now, we are about 4,000 miles from the earth's center.  The above "inverse square" law means that if we double that distance (so we're 8,000 miles from earth's center, or 4,000 miles above the surface), the earth's pull will diminish by 1/2², or 1/4.

This means the earth's pull gets ever weaker with distance, but never entirely vanishes.  For example, at the distance of the moon (about 60 earth radii), the pull of the earth is about 1/60², or 1/3600 as strong as it is here on the surface.  That's still strong enough to keep the moon in tow.
New Topic      
Explore
Post your homework questions and get free online help from our incredible volunteers
  1283 People Browsing
Related Images
  
 468
  
 484
  
 856
Your Opinion
What percentage of nature vs. nurture dictates human intelligence?
Votes: 431