This MCQ module is based on: G Earth Altitude Depth
G Earth Altitude Depth
This assessment will be based on: G Earth Altitude Depth
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G Earth Altitude Depth
7.4 The Gravitational Constant — and What It Tells Us
We saw in Part 1 that Newton's law contains the constant G = 6.67×10⁻¹¹ N m² kg⁻². Knowing G allows us to "weigh" the Earth itself: by measuring the free-fall acceleration g of a falling apple, we can deduce the mass of our planet without ever stepping off it.
7.5 Acceleration due to Gravity of the Earth
Consider an object of mass m placed on Earth's surface at a distance \(R_E\) from Earth's centre. By Newton's law of gravitation:
The same force, by Newton's Second Law, equals \(m\cdot g\). Cancelling m gives the famous expression for acceleration due to gravity at Earth's surface:
The Shell Theorem (Newton, 1687) lets us treat Earth as if all its mass were concentrated at its centre when computing the field outside Earth. Inside Earth, only the mass within the sphere of radius r below us contributes — the spherical shell above us cancels itself out (its inward and outward pulls perfectly balance).
7.6 Acceleration due to Gravity Below and Above the Earth's Surface
7.6.1 Above the Surface (Altitude h)
If we go to height h above the surface, the distance from Earth's centre becomes \(R_E + h\). So:
Dividing by surface g:
For small heights \(h\ll R_E\), using binomial expansion:
So g decreases linearly with altitude for small h. At the top of Mount Everest (h ≈ 8.85 km), g drops by about 0.28%. At the International Space Station (h ≈ 400 km), g is still about 89% of surface g — astronauts "float" not because gravity is absent but because they are in continuous free fall around Earth.
7.6.2 Below the Surface (Depth d)
Imagine descending to depth d below the surface. Only the mass inside a sphere of radius \((R_E - d)\) attracts you; the outer shell contributes zero net force (Shell Theorem). Assuming uniform density \(\rho\):
So the gravity at depth d is:
7.6.3 Variation Due to Latitude (Rotation Effect)
Earth rotates about its axis with angular velocity \(\omega = 7.27\times 10^{-5}\) rad/s. An object at latitude \(\lambda\) moves in a circle of radius \(R_E\cos\lambda\). The required centripetal force is provided partly by gravity, so the apparent g is reduced:
This effect is maximum at the equator (\(\lambda = 0\)) where it reduces g by ≈0.034 m/s². At the poles, the effect vanishes. Together with Earth's equatorial bulge, this is why g is largest at the poles (9.83 m/s²) and smallest at the equator (9.78 m/s²).
| Location | Latitude | g (m/s²) |
|---|---|---|
| North Pole | 90° | 9.832 |
| Helsinki | 60° | 9.819 |
| New Delhi | 28° | 9.791 |
| Singapore | 1° | 9.781 |
| Equator (sea level) | 0° | 9.780 |
7.7 The Gravitational Field
The gravitational field at a point is the force experienced per unit test mass placed at that point:
Field is a vector pointing toward the source mass. Its SI unit is N/kg (= m/s²). The field due to several masses is the vector sum of individual fields (superposition principle).
Interactive Simulation: g at Different Altitudes
Slide the altitude to see how g changes above (and below) Earth's surface.
g = 9.80 m/s²
Negative altitude = depth below surface. h = −6400 km is Earth's centre (g = 0).
Worked Example 1: g at the top of Everest
Find g at the top of Mt. Everest (h = 8.85 km).
Worked Example 2: g at a depth equal to R_E/2
Find g at depth d = R_E/2.
Worked Example 3: Mass of Earth from g
Using g = 9.8 m/s² and R_E = 6.4×10⁶ m, find Earth's mass.
Materials: Thread (≈1 m), bob, stand, stopwatch.
- Suspend the bob and measure thread length L (to bob's centre).
- Pull the bob aside (small angle <10°) and release.
- Time 20 oscillations; divide by 20 to get period T.
- Use \(T = 2\pi\sqrt{L/g}\) to compute g.
Typical student results: 9.4–10.1 m/s². Errors arise from: large amplitude (use small angle), air drag, parallax in measuring length, reaction-time error in timing (mitigate by counting 20+ swings). The pendulum method was the standard for measuring g until the 20th century — and Foucault's pendulum still demonstrates Earth's rotation in many planetariums.
Competency-Based Questions
Q1. The percentage decrease in g at 25 km altitude (compared to surface) is closest to:L3 Apply
Q2. At 3 km depth, by what fraction does g decrease?L3 Apply
Q3. True or False: At Earth's centre, your weight would be zero but your mass would also be zero.L4 Analyse
Q4. Why does g have its maximum value at the poles?L2 Understand
Q5. HOT: A future colony lives inside a hollow spherical asteroid (no rotation). Predict the gravitational field they would feel inside, and design a clever way they could verify the prediction.L6 Create
Assertion–Reason Questions
(A) Both true, R explains A. (B) Both true, R does NOT explain A. (C) A true, R false. (D) A false, R true.
A: g decreases linearly with depth inside the Earth.
R: Only the mass within a sphere of radius (R_E − d) attracts a body at that depth.
A: Astronauts in the ISS are weightless because gravity is absent at that altitude.
R: At 400 km altitude, g is still about 89% of its surface value.
A: The value of g is greater at the poles than at the equator.
R: Earth's rotation reduces the apparent g most at the equator and not at all at the poles.