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2 votes
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Can the rotation of the liquid layer of the core around the solid core stop a planet's overall spin rotation?

In some planets like Earth or Jupiter there is an external liquid or molten layer of the core which rotates around a more deeper solid core (partly due to the planet's spin itself). This dynamo effect ...
vengaq's user avatar
  • 2,878
0 votes
0 answers
21 views

Maintaining the magnetic field in gas giants in the future?

Let's set a planetary system similar to the Solar system in the far future, where the gas giants have cooled down significantly. Eventually, would the fluid metallic hydrogen layer solidify? And if it ...
vengaq's user avatar
  • 2,878
0 votes
0 answers
67 views

Existence of hollow planets

Recently I read a sci-fi describing a species living in a closed hollow space in a planet. An earlier answer suggested that such structures could exist but will not be stable, if only effected by self ...
Ma Ye's user avatar
  • 251
0 votes
3 answers
83 views

What if the Earth lost its gravitational force? [closed]

It's common to find such questions in textbooks, and generally the answer is that in the absence of other external forces (such as gravitational forces due to other stars and planets) a person ...
Anngad S Lammba's user avatar
3 votes
1 answer
88 views

Toroidal planets to toroidal black holes -- what changes?

It's believed that a sufficiently quickly rotating planet-sized mass could be stable in a toroidal planet formation (though vanishingly unlikely to form naturally). However, assuming no cosmological ...
whisperinggallery's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
53 views

Clockwise tornados in the southern hemisphere

When water is flushed out from a kitchen sink or a toilet in the northern hemisphere an anticlockwise swirling vortex is seen due to the action of the Coriolis force. It appears to be the case even ...
Narasimham's user avatar
  • 1,094
2 votes
1 answer
223 views

Does the orbital plane that contains the trajectories of 2 bodies pass through the center of mass of each of the bodies?

Two bodies that attract each other gravitationally will move in a conic trajectory with respect to the center of mass of both. A conic is the meeting of a cone and a plane thus it is always a plane ...
hellofriends's user avatar
16 votes
3 answers
4k views

Neil Tyson: gravity is the same everywhere on the geoid

Tyson claims our weight is the same at the North Pole as it is at the equator: Link. That the equatorial bulge lying outside a spherical shape doesn't exert gravity. I'm pretty sure this is wrong but ...
HopDavid's user avatar
  • 486
5 votes
3 answers
307 views

How would I calculate the gravity at a given depth on a planet with two distinct layers with different densities?

If you assume a planet to be one density then gravity just scales linearly from the centre to the surface, and you can use the surface gravity equation. How would you go about working out the gravity ...
Sam Dean's user avatar
  • 153
1 vote
4 answers
177 views

Does moving from the equator to a pole require more or less energy (work) than moving from a pole to the equator?

Let's assume the earth is perfectly smooth, and there are no other effects of gravity from other bodies such as the sun or moon. When the Earth rotates, centrifugal forces result in a 'bulge' at the ...
xulo's user avatar
  • 111
1 vote
1 answer
111 views

What is the cause for the acceleration of Earth?

I've read that spacetime curvature is present wherever initially parallel geodesics converge or diverge, and also that mass causes spacetime to curve. If there is indeed spacetime curvature due to the ...
Newbie's user avatar
  • 13
0 votes
0 answers
24 views

How can I calculate the heat transfers caused in Venus's atmosphere by a stellaser?

In Isaac Arthur's video Winter on Venus, he discusses using a stellaser to heat Venus’s atmosphere and remove its gases, but he doesn't go into much detail about the heat transfer involved in it. The ...
The Rocket fan's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
67 views

Problem understanding the bending of space-time curve as gravitational force! [duplicate]

I got the point of considering gravitational force as curvature on space-time fabric for bigger objects like stars, planets, blackholes. But my doubt is over the objects like us, what keeps us on this ...
Rifat Ahmed Tusher's user avatar
0 votes
3 answers
908 views

What counts as the Earth's mass? At which point would it increase or decrease?

I get that gravity depends on the mass of an object: more mass = higher gravity. But over time humans have been doing stuff to the total amount of stuff on the Earth due to space travel. At which ...
Matt Bartlett's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
46 views

Is it possible to charge a zero potential ball?

I've been studying electrostatic potential and capacitance and am curious about the Earth's role in absorbing charge. The Earth is often considered an almost neutral body that can absorb an unlimited ...
riteshwar's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
64 views

Components of Earth's angular velocity when vertical axis is aligned with apparent gravity

I've been reading the book "Classical Mechanics" by John Taylor, and in the chapter about noninertial reference frames, it states that the direction of $g$ (the apparent gravity, which ...
Nick Kovac's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
66 views

Numerical Solution of the circular restricted three body problem [closed]

I am trying to numerically solve the differential equations in the planar circular restricted three-body problem. In the rotating frame, the differential equations are given by \begin{equation} \...
Markus Hamre's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
66 views

Why does a moon's orbit get more circular with time?

I understand that there is a transfer of energy between a moon and a planet depending on whether the moon is orbiting faster or slower than the spin rate of the planet. This would obviously change the ...
Jack R. Woods's user avatar
4 votes
4 answers
523 views

What is the relationship between gravitation, centripetal and centrifugal force on the Earth?

I'm trying to analyze a situation wherein a ship is moving across the surface of the earth. I am trying to analyze this situation in a reference frame that is rotating with the earth (NED frame). I am ...
john morrison's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
87 views

The topology of planets [duplicate]

Just a curiosity: Let $g \in \mathbb{Z}_{>0}$. Is it possible for a planet of topological genus $g$ to exist? For example, is there any contradiction (from the point of view of physics) in assuming ...
numberwat's user avatar
  • 121
0 votes
2 answers
88 views

Why are planets denser as you approach the center?

Gauss' law says that the net electric force inside a hollow, uniform, not rotating sphere is zero. Since gravity is also proportional to the inverse square of the distance, I assume this should apply ...
Joseph Hirsch's user avatar
1 vote
4 answers
170 views

Gravitational attraction between two bodies

While the gravitational force between two bodies is directly proportional to their masses, and inversely proportional to the distance between them is understandable / seems logical, how did Newton ...
Niranjan's user avatar
  • 123
0 votes
1 answer
27 views

Can we treat the entire mass of the spheroid as being concentrated at its center?

I know that to find the gravitational force between two objects, if either of them is a sphere, we can assume its mass to be concentrated at its center and use the formula for gravitational forces for ...
Peter swift's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
51 views

Despite tides the Moon, as far as I know, doesn't slow down. Where does the energy come from? [duplicate]

Hy, I don't have anything to do with physics, so please forgive me if I explain my question in a weird way ;) As the Moon rotates around the earth it is creating tides and waves on the earth. IE it's ...
Jakob S.'s user avatar
19 votes
6 answers
9k views

If gravity is not a force, what makes massive objects spheroid?

For most of my life, the explanation given for why celestial bodies like stars, planets, etc. are round is due to gravitational force. Simply put, if an object has enough mass, it will, in turn, have ...
Quantum Wonder's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
65 views

Why are planets cold?

Excuse me for me ignorance, I'm just fiddling around this question for quite a while. The question of course is not limited to planets. Boiling down to, why isn't the universe heated up by now to ...
jAndy's user avatar
  • 101
0 votes
2 answers
72 views

How symmetric do we know the gravitation field to be?

Currently, the only ways to measure gravity is on quite large scale. So these experiments measure gravity averaged between vast systems of particles. Of course, such an averaging results¹⁾ in a ...
Ilya Zakharevich's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
112 views

Minimum size for a planet to have a molten core

What would be the minimum size for a planet or moon so that it would have a molten core? Gravity and density would play a part but how could this be worked out?
Michael Mcgarry's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
69 views

Magnetic compass working on the Moon and the Mars planet

Mars planet Moon Magnetic compass Theoretically and practically, will a magnetic compass work on the Moon and the Mars planet?
Prashant Akerkar's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
77 views

What regulates the size of our atmosphere?

Our atmosphere is only about 100km thick before the official start of space. That is a mere 1.57307% of the radius of Earth (6,357km). The difference between the gratitational force at sea level and ...
Peter R. McMahon's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
394 views

What are the odds of a rogue planet that enters into a galaxy reaching the black hole at the center of the galaxy?

I am wondering if anybody has ever calculated the odds of a rogue planet, which has been traveling through interstellar space and then enters into a galaxy, being able to travel all the way to the ...
user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
307 views

Helium in Uranus atmosphere

I read that in 1986 Voyager 2 measured the composition of Uranus' atmosphere, which turned out to be composed of $85 \%$ hydrogen and $15 \%$ helium. It's not clear to me how this relevant amount of ...
gryphys's user avatar
  • 566
1 vote
2 answers
194 views

How to calculate equilibrium height of tidal bulge?

I am trying to model the shape of the tidal bulge caused by the moon. I asked GPT for a formula and it gave me equilibrium tidal bulge height as $$\frac{2 R_{earth} G M_{moon}}{3 r^3 \Delta g}$$ and ...
spraff's user avatar
  • 5,188
0 votes
4 answers
155 views

What is the real shape of Earth? [duplicate]

As it now widely dicussed and accepted that Earth is not a 'perfectly round sphere/ball but more a 'oblate spheroid' why then do NASA have 'photographs' of a ROUND Earth?
T Ruth's user avatar
  • 11
2 votes
1 answer
64 views

Angular momentum of the Moon (or any body orbiting another orbiting body)

Let the Moon have angular velocity $\omega$ around the Earth. The Earth itself revolves with velocity $V$ around the Sun. The radius vectors are $r_i$ from Sun to a point on the Moon, $r_i'$ from ...
sasssu's user avatar
  • 33
3 votes
2 answers
548 views

Is it possible, by monitoring the brightness of stars, to find a “copy of the Earth + Moon” near them?

More than a dozen Earth-like planets have been discovered around nearby stars based on observations of changes in the brightness of their sun as they pass across its disk (transit events). If an Earth-...
Ванек Огонек's user avatar
7 votes
2 answers
505 views

Exact analytical solution for the surface gravity of an oblate spheroid

I would like to know if an exact solution for the surface gravity force components of an oblate spheroid has been published and if not can anyone derive it here? Assume an ideal rigid oblate sphere of ...
KDP's user avatar
  • 10.1k
0 votes
0 answers
47 views

Why is Earth a sphere? [duplicate]

Physicists and Physics enthusiasts . I am new to this platform. And I wanted to post a question . Since I have nothing in my mind. I wanted to ask , Why is the earth a sphere and not other shape? ...
rasulus's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
72 views

What is the hydrostatic shape of an ideal rotating planet? [duplicate]

It is a well-known fact that rotating planets have a flattened spheroidal shape. However, the NASA site says about Haumea: The fast spin distorts Haumea's shape, making this dwarf planet look like a ...
user27542's user avatar
  • 876
0 votes
0 answers
36 views

Is either Geocentrism/Heliocentrism more "correct" than the other? [duplicate]

Yesterday there was a casual discussion of the findings of the scientist Galileo in my German class. It was mentioned that his breakthrough was that, he found a convincing explanation that earth ...
Brian's user avatar
  • 8,040
0 votes
0 answers
49 views

Why does a total solar eclipse happen every 18 Months?

What is the math involved in calculating how often a total solar eclipse happens. Can you predict it by just looking at the period of the moon around the earth and the period of the earth around the ...
244529's user avatar
  • 1
1 vote
0 answers
34 views

Holsapple simple scaling law [closed]

Could someone explain Holsapple's simple scaling law? Furthermore, is Holsapple simple scaling law able to be used on Earth in the context of dropping an object and measuring the impact crater size? ...
Imstrugglingomd's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
109 views

Estimate Saturn's mass [closed]

How can you estimate Saturn's mass using data from Cassini's final moments in September 2017 (apoapsis on September 12 at 1:27 a.m. EDT Saturn time at a distance of about $1.3*10^6$ km from Saturn, ...
Enkt Enktson's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
46 views

Gravity formula inside a planetary core

I am trying to work through this problem so that I can understand how to convert from pressure values to radius values inside a planetary core in a code. The core has variable density depending on ...
Priya Bose's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
18 views

What is a simple way to estimate $σ_{RV}$ assuming photon noise in radial velocity measurements?

Hello there i have been trying to figure out what is wanted in the question "Simple way to estimate σ_RV assuming photon noise" for a presentation. But i can not seems to find much, but i ...
GodOfDemoting's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
124 views

Atmosphere of a hypothetical planet

A hypothetical planet is 2/3 the radius of earth but has 1g surface gravity. Given the planet has the same surface gravity as earth, the atmospheric pressure would be the same. This would also mean ...
Adrean Mainhart's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
69 views

Why is sunset in mars blue?

This is the Martian sunset, as captured by the Spirit rover of NASA. Notice the colors are inverted, i.e. the direct rays blue and diffused rays red, which is exactly the opposite of what you would ...
AlphaLife's user avatar
  • 12.6k
0 votes
1 answer
70 views

Issue while understanding gravity/radius of earth graph [closed]

I have following question. What are my opinions? 1. Option 1 - This is incorrect. I think dotted line in option 1 from bottom to peak represents center to surface of earth. After the peak, line ...
Pankaj's user avatar
  • 85
2 votes
0 answers
57 views

Would ocean tides on the moon of a gas giant really be kilometers high?

I was reading an article on exomoon habitability constrained by illumination and tidal heating. The article imagines an Earth-like exomoon around Jupiter-like host planet. That got me thinking about ...
Boreal Stars's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
341 views

How to measure the ratio of a planet's radius to a star?

I was reading a physics problem related to astronomy, and upon re-reading it, I realized that it could be really indicated to extrapolate some really interesting physics-related information. One of ...
Bml's user avatar
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