Sujet : Re: Newton's Gravity
De : dr.j.thornburg (at) *nospam* gmail-pink.com (Jonathan Thornburg [remove -color to reply])
Groupes : sci.physics.researchDate : 03. Jan 2025, 23:18:17
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <ltr619FcjgqU1@mid.dfncis.de>
References : 1 2 3
In article <
vl0q35$28cau$1@dont-email.me> Luigi Fortunati wrote:
Suppose that body A has mass M=1000 and body B has mass m=1 [[...]]
If another unit mass 1 is added to body B, its mass doubles to m=2 and
the force acting between the two bodies also doubles, [[...]]
But if the other unit mass is added to body A (instead of body B) the
mass of A will become equal to M=1001 (remaining almost unchanged) just
as the force between the two bodies remains practically unchanged [[...]]
Why does the force acting between the two bodies double if we add the
unit mass to body B and, substantially, does not change if we add it to
the mass of body A?
In article <
ltkbcoF9g4cU1@mid.dfncis.de>, I replied
| Why not? Why might we expect the effects of adding mass in one location
| (A) to be the same as those of adding mass in a different location (B)?
In article <
vl3tv1$2sdba$1@dont-email.me>, Luigi replied
Yes, we *should* expect the same effects if we mean the same thing by
"effects."
I'm talking about masses (causes) and forces (effects): what effects
are you talking about?
Let's analyze a somewhat more general system: Suppose we have a pair
of masses A and B, and consider the effects of adding a mass C at either
position #1 or position #2.
[Luigi's original question had position #1 = position
of A, position #2 = position of B, mass A = 1000, mass
B = 1, and mass C = 1, but I find it useful to consider
the more generic case.]
A+B+C1 and A+B+C2 are *physically different* systems (going from one to
the other involves moving the mass C from position #1 to position #2).
So why should we expect any of the following Newtonian gravitational
effects to be the same between these two *physically different* systems:
* Newtonian gravitational potential U at some test point X
* Newtonian gravitational acceleration "little-g" at some test point X
(= - gradient of U)
* force between A+C1 and B versus force between A and B+C2
In fact, it's easy to see that all three of these "effects" differ... as
we should expect, because (again) we're comparing *physically different*
systems.
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