So will the bowling ball gravitationally attract the earth to itself there by reach the earth an infinitesimally small amount?
your mom falls significantly faster than g
Submitted 1 month ago by BB84@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz
https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/6754eee5-2127-4ea6-afd2-3f2ddfb05e87.png
Comments
Shard@lemmy.world 1 month ago
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
Yes, the earth accelerates toward the ball faster than it does toward the feather.
SzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Wouldn’t this be equally offset by the increase in inertia from their masses?
pumpkinseedoil@mander.xyz 1 month ago
Why your spoiler is wrong:
The gravitational force between two objects is G(m1 m2)/r²
G = ~6.67 • 10^-11 Nm²/kg²
m1 = Mass of the earth = ~5.972 • 10^24 kg
m2 = Mass of the second object, I’ll use M to refer to this from now on
r = ~6378 • 10^3 m
Fg = 6.67 • 10^-11^ Nm²/kg² • 5.972 • 10^24^ kg • M / (6378 • 10^3 m)² = ~9.81 • M N/kg = 9.81 • M m kg / s² / kg = 9.81 • M m/s² = g • M
Since this is the acceleration that works between both masses, it already includes the mass of an iron ball having a stronger gravitational field than that of a feather.
So yes, they are, in fact, taking the same time to fall.
red@lemmy.zip 1 month ago
the fact that you got upvoted, you clearly said force on both objects is gM and the feather or ball will move with g BUT earth will move with gM/m1 which is more in case of ball, and no its not acceleration between mases, its the force experiencec by both mases so, fg=m1.a
barsoap@lemm.ee 1 month ago
BUT earth will move with gM/m1
No. Multiplication is associative, you can switch the masses around as you please, nowhere in the formula does it say “the greater mass” or “the lower mass” you could just as well re-arrange the formula and come up with “earth moves with gm1/M”. Last but not least there’s only one force acting on both objects… and gM/m1 is neither a speed nor a force. G * 100kg / 20kg is 5G. Measured in Nm²/kg² which is the same we started with because the two mass units cancel each other out.
They both fall towards their shared centre of gravity. It’s this “the earth revolves around the sun” thing again, no it doesn’t, they both revolve around their shared centre of gravity (which, yes, is within the sun but still makes it wobble). That centre is very far away from the ball and very close to the earth and both are moving at the same speed towards it (because acceleration doesn’t depend on mass), blip to the next frame of the simulation now the centre of gravity moved towards the ball, next frame still closer to the ball, that is the reason both reach it at the same time, not because one is faster than the other.
…or so it would be, if the shared centre of gravity of ball and earth wouldn’t lie within the earth so they don’t actually both reach it, the earth is in the way, the rest of the acceleration is turned into static friction: Because they both are still falling even when in contact.
Sasha@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 month ago
This is not correct, the force on the objects is the same sure, but the accelerations aren’t so you can’t calculate them both in one go like this.
reliv3@lemmy.world 1 month ago
This argument is deeply flawed when applying classical Newtonian physics. You have two issues:
- Acceleration of a system is caused by a sum of forces or a net force, not individual forces. To claim that the Earth accelerates differently due to two different forces is an incorrect application of Newton’s second law. If you drop a bowling and feather in a vacuum, then both the feather and the bowling ball will be pulling on the Earth simultaneously. The Earth’s acceleration be the same towards both the bowling ball and the feather, because we would consider both the force of the feather on the Earth and the force of the bowling ball on the Earth when calculating the acceleration of the Earth.
- You present this notion that two different systems can accelerate at 9.81 m/s/s towards Earth according to an observer standing on the surface of Earth; but when you place an observer on either surface of the two systems, Earth is accelerating at a different rate. This is classically impossible. If two systems are accelerating at 9.81 m/s/s towards Earth, then Earth must be accelerating 9.81 m/s/s towards both systems too.
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
Re your first point: I was imagining doing the two experiments separately. But even if you do them at the same time, as long as you don’t put the two objects right on top of each other, the earth’s acceleration would still be slanted toward the ball, making the ball hit the ground very very slightly sooner.
Re your second point: The object would be accelerating in the direction of earth. The 9.81m/s/s is with respect to an reference frame (say the center of mass frame). The earth is also accelerating in the direction of the object at some acceleration with respect to the inertial reference frame.
reliv3@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Even if you imagine doing them separately, the acceleration of the Earth cannot be calculated based on just a singular force unless you assume nothing else is exerting a force on the Earth during the process of the fall. For a realistic model, this is a bad assumption. The Earth is a massive system which interacts with a lot of different systems. The one tiny force exerted on it by either the feather or bowling ball has no measurable affect on the motion of Earth. This is not just a mass issue, it’s the fact that Earth’s free body diagram would be full of Force Vectors and only one of them would either be the feather or bowling ball as they fall.
As for my second point, I understand your model and I am defining these references frames by talking about where an observer is located. An observer standing still on Earth would measure the acceleration of the feather or bowling ball to be 9.81 m/s/s. If we placed a camera on the feather or bowling ball during the fall, then they would measure the acceleration of the Earth to also be 9.81 m/s/s. There is no classical way that these two observers would disagree with each other in the magnitudes of the acceleration.
Think of a simpler example. A person driving a car towards someone standing at a stop sign. If the car is moving 20 mph towards the pedestrian, then in the perspective of the car’s driver, the pedestrian is moving 20 mph towards them. There is no classical way that these two speeds will be different…
Trail@lemmy.world 1 month ago
If the earth would be accelerating towards you, then g would be less than 9.81.
Think of free falling, where your experienced g would be 0.
MrsDoyle@sh.itjust.works 1 month ago
Brian Cox shows ball and feathers falling together in vacuum: youtu.be/E43-CfukEgs
Xavienth@lemmygrad.ml 1 month ago
The difference in relative acceleration implied by the meme is on the order of tens of yoctometres (10⁻²³ m) per second per second.
It’s a difference so small that it would be overshadowed by the fact that you’re holding one object femtometres higher or lower than the other in the gravitational field.
Additional sources of error to consider at this scale might be the heat radiation from the surroundings providing radiation pressure on the object, the sloshing of Earth’s core causing time-dependent variations in the gravitational field, the location-dependent variations in the Earth’s gravitational field, and the difference in centrifugal (yes, centrifugal in this reference frame) force due to latitude differences of one micrometre, and also due to natural variations in the rate of Earth’s rotation over time.
KyuubiNoKitsune@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 month ago
I love it when scientists who know something to be true in theory get to see practical experiments like this. The jubilation on thier faces.
CatZoomies@lemmy.world 1 month ago
There’s too many words in this meme that’s making me dizzy from all your fancy science leechcraft, wizard.
I reject your reality and substitute my own: the feather falls faster. It’s more streamlined than the bowling ball, and thus it slips through the vacuum much faster and does hit the ground and stay on the ground, I think. The ball will bounce at least once, maybe even three times. On each bounce, parts of it probably break off, which change the weight. Thankfully those broken pieces won’t hurt anyone because they’re sucked up by the vacuum. Thus, rendering your dungeon wizard spells ineffective against me.
Masta_Chief@lemmy.world 1 month ago
This person sciences good
Kolanaki@yiffit.net 1 month ago
But what weighs more:
A ton of bowling balls or a ton of feathers? 🤔
KoboldCoterie@pawb.social 1 month ago
When you carry a ton of feathers, you also have to carry the weight of what you did to those poor birds…
OriginalUsername7@lemmy.world 1 month ago
What about all the bowling cattle you had to castrate for those balls?
Sonotsugipaa@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 month ago
That’s a trick question. Feathers have lower density than bowling balls; a ton of feathers would have a larger volume compared to the same mass in bowling ball, thus they’re heavier
Donkter@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Why does a larger volume mean the feathers are heavier?
Redderthanmisty@lemmygrad.ml 1 month ago
Its a trick question because both weigh the same - a ton. The bag of feathers may take up more volume due to the lower density, but it’ll still weigh the same as the bag of bowling balls.
roscoe@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 month ago
This would make a good “What if?” For XKCD. In a frictionless vacuum with two spheres the mass of the earth and a bowling ball how far away do they need to start before the earth sized mass will move 1 Planck length before they come together?
Sasha@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 month ago
I actually thought the answer might be never, but a quick back of the envelope calculation suggests you can do this by dropping a ~1kg bowling ball from a height of 10^-11m.
This is an extremely rough calculation, I’m basically just looking at how big a bunch of numbers are and pushing all that through some approximate formulae. I could easily be off by a few orders of magnitude and frankly I didn’t take care to check I was even doing any of it correctly.
10^-11m seems wrong, and frankly it probably is. But that’s still 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 times further than the earth moves in this situation.
fubarx@lemmy.ml 1 month ago
Depends on the color of the feather and the ball.
There’s a simple explanation.
tetris11@lemmy.ml 1 month ago
Exactly, red has way more up-quarks than blue
fubarx@lemmy.ml 1 month ago
Because light-blue weighs less than blue.
Sasha@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 month ago
If anyone’s wondering, I used to be a physicist and gravity was essentially my area of study, OP is right assuming an ideal system, and some of the counter arguments I’ve seen here are bizarre.
If this wasn’t true, then gravity would be a constant acceleration all the time and everything would take the same amount of time to fall towards everything else (assuming constant starting distance).
You can introduce all the technicalities you want about how negligible the difference is between a bowling ball and a feather, and while you’d be right (well actually still wrong, this is an idealised case after all, you can still do the calculation and prove it to be true) you’d be missing the more interesting fact that OP has decided to share with you.
If you do the maths correctly, you should get a=G(m+M)/r^2 for the acceleration between the two, if m is the mass of the bowling ball or feather, you can see why increasing it would result in a larger acceleration. From there it’s just a little integration to get the flight time. For the argument where the effect of the bowling ball feather is negligible, that’s apparent by making the approximation m+M≈M, but it is in this system an approximation.
I could probably go ahead and work out what the corrections are under GR but I don’t want to and they’d be pretty damn tiny.
Simulation6@sopuli.xyz 1 month ago
Physics books always say to assume the objects are points in doing calculations. Does the fact that the ball is thicker then the feather make a difference?
Sasha@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 month ago
Possibly?
A bowling ball is more dense than a feather (I assume) and that’s probably going to matter more than just the size. Things get messy when you start considering the actual mass distributions, and honestly the easiest way to do any calculations like that is to just break each object up into tiny point like masses that are all rigidly connected, and then calculate all the forces between all of those points on a computer.
I full expect it just won’t matter as much as the difference in massed.
Buddahriffic@lemmy.world 1 month ago
It would, similar to how the mass of each object does have an effect, even if negligible. But the question is if the radius of the bowling ball vs feather has a greater effect than the mass of the bowling ball vs the feather.
You can adjust the value r in the universal gravitational equation by the radius of the bowling ball and compare the extremes (both plus and minus the radius) and the middle point to see the tidal effects.
If the feather starts at the middle height of the bowling ball, the tidal effects would help the bowling ball. If it starts at the lowest point of the bowling ball, the tidal effects would hinder the bowling ball.
But the magnitude of that effect depends on the distance from the center of the other mass.
I think the main thing would be the ratio of the small mass vs big mass compared to the ratio of the small radius vs the big radius.
Though, thinking of it more, since the bowling ball is a sphere (ignoring finger holes), the greater pull on the close side would be balanced by the lesser pull on the far side (assuming the difference between those two forces isn’t greater than the force holding the ball together), so now I think it doesn’t matter (up to that structural force and with the assumption that the finger holes aren’t significant).
If they are falling into a small black hole, then it does become relevant because the bowling ball will get stringified more than the feather once the forces are extreme enough to break the structural bonds, but the math gets too complicated to wrap my mind around right now. If I had to guess, the bowling ball would start crossing the event horizon first, but the feather would finish crossing it first. And an outside observer would see even more stretched out images of both of them for a while after that, which would make actually measuring the sequence of events impossible.
And who knows what happens inside, maybe each would become a galaxy in a nested universe.
barsoap@lemm.ee 1 month ago
Quick intuition boost for the non-believers: How do things look like if you’re standing on the surface of the bowling ball? Are feather and earth falling towards you at the same speed, or is there a difference?
TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works 1 month ago
Reading that spoiler, I hate scientists sometimes.
chatokun@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 month ago
For some reason on my client, it can’t remove the spoiler (gives a network error). I’m assuming it says that since the ball has more mass, it has a higher attraction rate of its own gravity to Earth’s, so does fall faster in a vacuum but so miniscule it would be hard to measure?
TriflingToad@sh.itjust.works 1 month ago
“The bowling ball isn’t falling to the earth faster. The higher perceived acceleration is due to the earth falling toward the bowling ball.” is what the spoiler says
Slovene@feddit.nl 1 month ago
But … Steel is heavier …
BmeBenji@lemm.ee 1 month ago
“In our limited language that tries to describe reality and does so very poorly, how would you describe this situation that would literally never happen?”
Fleur_@lemm.ee 1 month ago
I’m pretty sure bowling balls and feathers fall all the time
zqps@sh.itjust.works 1 month ago
I think they mean the vacuum part.
To which I’d add that we had astronauts perform this experimentally on the surface of the moon.
jerkface@lemmy.ca 1 month ago
Obviously the bowling ball because it’s more MASSIVE.
Boomkop3@reddthat.com 1 month ago
Or dense?
Reddfugee42@lemmy.world 1 month ago
It’s the mass that results in gravity, not the density. A giant cloud of gas will have the same gravitational effects as if it were compressed into its solid phase
mathemachristian@hexbear.net 1 month ago
You can stuff your misogynist fatshaming where it would hurt the most too wtf is going on with lemmy lately?
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
fixed it sorry
mathemachristian@hexbear.net 1 month ago
Oh wow, awesome! Was bracing for a whole host of anti-woke commentary but you genuinely seem to care about respecting others so I should point out that you only fixed the misogynist part and not the fatshaming part.
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
Here’s a problem for y’all: how heavy does someone’s mom have to be to fall 10% faster than g? Just give an approximate.
WolfLink@sh.itjust.works 1 month ago
10% if
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
@WolfLink@sh.itjust.works and @theturtlemoves@hexbear.net are correct
theturtlemoves@hexbear.net 1 month ago
One tenth the mass of the earth?
RumorsOfLove@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 month ago
the feather falling toward the earth will also be attracted to the bowling ball (which is on the earth)
doesnt offset, because the feather-ball attraction is not as large as the earth-ball. just wanted to say
Willy@sh.itjust.works 1 month ago
They are on opposite sides of the earth
DavidGarcia@feddit.nl 1 month ago
uhmmm ackchshickzually, it’s the space-time that’s falling
noisefree@lemmy.world 1 month ago
This may be a stupid question, but: assuming an object (the bowling ball) is created from materials found on Earth and that it remains within the gravity well of Earth from material procurement stage to the point where it is dropped, wouldn’t the acceleration of the Earth towards the object be kind of a null considering the whole timeline of events? I mean, I get the distinction of higher mass objects technically causing the Earth to accelerate towards them faster if we’re talking a feather vs a bowling ball that both originated somewhere else before encountering Earth’s gravity well in a vacuum, it just seems kind of weird to consider Earth’s acceleration towards objects that originating and staying within its gravity well?
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
I didn’t think about that! If the object was taken from earth then indeed the total acceleration between it and earth would be G M_total / r^2, regardless of the mass of the object.
NateNate60@lemmy.world 1 month ago
So obviously I ended up in the middle of this bell curve. How would that cause the perception of the ball’s acceleration to differ?
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
When the earth pulls on an object with some F newtons of force, the object is also pulling on the earth with the same force. It’s just that the earth is so massive that its acceleration F/m will be tiny. Tiny is not zero though, so the earth is still accelerating toward the object. The heavier the object, the faster earth accelerates toward it.
Both the bowling ball and the feather accelerates toward earth at the same g=9.81m/s^2, but the earth accelerates toward the bowling ball faster than it does toward the feather.
rooroo@feddit.org 1 month ago
But the question is which one falls faster, not which one pulls the earth faster.
Middle it is!
trxxruraxvr@lemmy.world 1 month ago
It won’t cause the perception to differ because the difference is so small it’s impossible to measure
Edge004@lemm.ee 1 month ago
The middle of the bell curve only works in a vacuum, and the top of the bell curve is true with wind resistance
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
Even in a perfect vacuum the bowling ball still falls faster. See my comment sibling to yours.
ultrahamster64@lemmy.world 1 month ago
No, it isn’t. Because earth wouldn’t fall towards the ball. Why?
Go to your frige right now and try to push it with one finger. It doesn’t move does it? You may say “That’s because of static friction!” And you would be correct. The force of static friction. Because the object moves in the direction of vector sum of all forces.
Tap for spoiler
(In the example with fridge the static friction force cancels all other forces up to certain value and after that - motion)
And adding microscopic attraction force towards the ball absolutely doesn’t change the full vector sum of forces, that are applied to Earth constantly (which is probably pointed towards the sun).
FuglyDuck@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Bowling ball. Because wind resistance is a thing and the feather has higher surface area creating more drag.
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
A feather has smaller surface area than a bowling ball. But drag acceleration is proportional to the surface area divided by the mass (and this quantity is indeed smaller for the bowling ball).
aberrate_junior_beatnik@midwest.social 1 month ago
A feather has smaller surface area than a bowling ball.
Depends on the feather and the bowling ball. Even relatively small (by volume) feathers might outdo a bowling ball thanks to the numerous fine shapes they have.
marcos@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Hum… What is your measurement error?
Muffi@programming.dev 1 month ago
Isn’t “heavier” only used when describing weight and not mass?
Tlaloc_Temporal@lemmy.ca 1 month ago
It’s almost analogous. A more massive object experiences a larger force caused by gravity, so assuming the gravity field stays the same, a larger mass is heavier.
You’re right that it’s technically incorrect, especially when talking about something like moving the Earth with gravity.
originalfrozenbanana@lemm.ee 1 month ago
Does this imply that if I am standing on an object moving at a constant speed in a straight line, and I am lifting and dropping a sufficiently massive object such that I’m causing the object in standing on to accelerate towards the object I’m dropping, that eventually I’ll slow or stop the object I’m standing on?
sheepy@lemm.ee 1 month ago
For the sake of simplicity, let’s say you have negligible mass, while the two masses, m1 and m2, have equal masses and sizes. Everything is moving at some velocity in a vacuum. When the two masses are touching, the Centre of Gravity is midway between their Centres of Mass, which in this scenario would mean it is where they touch. When you pick up m2, an equal and opposite force would push m1 away. Because they both have equal mass, both would end up the same distance away from the CoG. If you lifted m2 on your head, the CoG would be right at the middle of your height. For as long as you’re holding m2, your body is resisting the force of attraction due to gravity between m1 and m2. When you drop m2, both it and m1 accelerate towards the CoG. When they meet, the energy you put into lifting m2 would be converted into heat in the collision. From an outside observer, while you were doing all that, the CoG was moving in a perfectly straight line with no change in velocity. Now, if you instead threw m2 away from m1 faster than its escape velocity, then that would change the velocity. If m1 and m2 weren’t equal in mass and size, the CoG would still be moving in a straight line, but the distance m1 and m2 moves away from the CoG would be proportional to their masses.
BB84@mander.xyz 1 month ago
Nope. The argument only works if you conjured the bowling ball and feather out of
thin airvacuum. lemmy.world/comment/13237315 discusses what happens when the objects were lifted off earth.originalfrozenbanana@lemm.ee 1 month ago
Drat. Thanks 😂
superkret@feddit.org 1 month ago
Stupid question, bowling balls don’t fit through the vacuum’s hose.
Nomecks@lemmy.ca 1 month ago
Ur mom could suck it through