bottomfeeder22
Contributor
So in accounting we have contra accounts, so might the answer be contra-bouyancy, balanced bouyancy, and inflated bouyancy?
Oooooh, Contra! ↑ ↑ ↓ ↓ ← → ← → B A start!
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So in accounting we have contra accounts, so might the answer be contra-bouyancy, balanced bouyancy, and inflated bouyancy?
Ah, yes, Bluto's third law: Two men shall never occupy neighboring chairs, or urinals, excepting when sufficiently intoxicated, or attending a baseball game.
Tom
You are forgetting distance, which also affects gravitational force. Whatever is above you in the atmosphere no longer contributes its mass to the equation, but your distance from the center point is now reduced, so whatever mass is still "beneath you" will produce a greater force. If most of the mass is still beneath you, and not above you, you get heavier. If the object is a consistent density, then you become lighter.
Look it up, it's interesting.
But yes, everyone agrees that at the Earth's center of gravity, the Earth produces no gravitational pull.
Tom
Tom,
You might want to rethink that statement. All matter in the universe (whether molecules of air above us, the rings of Saturn, or a distant star) exert a gravitational pull on all the other matter in the universe. Most of the time the gravitational pull is so small we can not detect it.
If you want a simple example of "whatever is above you" contributing to gravity you need look no further than the tides.
Weight is a function of gravity. Mass is not. I have the same mass on the earth as I do on the moon. However, I would weigh much less on the moon.