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gravity and height
ok say you have a bag that has it contents weighing about 40 lbs. at ground lvl thus.. but say 40 stories up does it still weigh the same?
was wondering this cuz i took out the trash this morning and at ground lvl it felt less heavy.. or was it just the fact that i was glad i finally made it to the ground floor? |
If anything it would be something like 0.00000001 milligrams heavier due to increased air pressure
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Of course the mass will remain the same. The force it exerts changes inversely with the square of the distance from the center of the earth's mass, but the difference between 40 stories up and ground level is negligable.
Even if you were 1km higher, since the radius of the earth is a bit more than 6000km, the difference in gravitational force would be less than 1/6001^2 - 1/6000^2 or less than .008%. Remember this example has you a kilometer up, and the trash would weigh .0047 ounces less. So technically, the trash was heavier at ground level. |
Actually I believe the bag or whatever should weigh VERY slightly less at the 40th story. This is due to gravity being stronger the closer you are to an object.
Now, I could be wrong since I wasn't very good at physics. Please correct m if I am wrong. |
For all practical purposes, things weigh the same no matter if you're in a skyscraper or a cave. In reality, there are very very small differences for various reasons, but they're way below anything you could feel.
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Hell dude, im metric the gravity at ground level is about 9.8 N/kg.
Where the satellites orbit its between 7 and 8N/kg... Definatly not going to notice a change, and definatly not going to be lighter at the bottom. |
Quote:
An object would weigh (not mass.. weight) as much in a high pressure chamber at (lets say.. ) sea level, as in a vacuum chamber at sea level. |
The feeling that it was lighter was caused by your arm going numb after carrying 40 pounds down 40 flights of stairs.
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remember weight and mass are difrent
it would weight a bit less the force of gravity is inversly perpotional to the distance. so being a bit further would reduce the 'pull' but the mass of the bag would be the same. |
It should be about the same, the only difference, like everyone else has said, is the air pressure, but gravity still is the same
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/me hits Bigt over the head with a tuna for not actually reading any of the posts.
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