Physics Asked by user794763 on June 7, 2021
What do we mean by the term weight? Is it an upward force exerted by an object to counteract the downward force of gravity (or) is it the downward force itself? Is the magnitude of the weight always equal to the gravitational force regardless of the frame?
the weight of an object is the gravitational force of attraction exerted by the earth. However, the apparent weight is actually equal to the normal contact force.
Why is this, you might ask. well, the thing is you can only feel forces that act on certain parts of your body, like your feet or hands, because they cause your body to exert internal forces in order to maintain its shape. You cannot feel forces that act uniformly on every part of the body, because every part of the body has the same acceleration and no internal forces need to be exerted.
When you are standing on the ground, the normal contact force and the gravitational force are equal. However, you only "feel" the normal contact force as it only acts on your feet; you cannot feel the gravitational force that acts on every single atom of your body. So the normal contact force is the apparent weight.
when you're accelerating upwards on a lift, the normal contact force is greater than the gravitational force. So you're apparent weight is actually greater than you're true weight. When you're in free fall, the normal contact force and thus the apparent weight are zero, hence the misnomer "weightlessness", even though your weight is the unchanged.
note: I mentioned that you cannot feel the earth's gravity because it acts uniformly over ur body. This isn't always the case. As you know, gravity changes with distance. For non massive objects like the earth, the rate of change is very small. However, for massive objects like blackholes, the rate of variation is large and you can actually feel significantly different forces on the upper and lower part of your body, which can kill you. This is known as spaghettification
Answered by OVERWOOTCH on June 7, 2021
Several definitions exists :
Minuses of such definition :
Notes :
Still minuses exist:
Answered by Agnius Vasiliauskas on June 7, 2021
It is the downward force that any object A does on another object B, or the upward reaction of B on A, that has the same magnitude according to the $3_rd$ Law.
I think it is better definition than the force of earth on the object. Because, in the common use of the word, we say that objects in the ISS are weightless, even being under gravitational attraction.
Sometimes the upward reaction is more apparent, as in the case of a floating baloon, or any other buoyance case. But the downwards force on the fluid is also present.
Even heavier than air vehicles weights on the air, as discussed in Is the weight of the aircraft flying in the sky transferred to the ground?
Answered by Claudio Saspinski on June 7, 2021
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