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When a person stands on the surface of the earth, where do they appear to weight the most? (Assume the earth is a perfect sphere, i.e. ignore the mountains)
A. The Equator
B. The North Pole
C. Midway between the Equator and The North Pole
D. The person's weight will be the same at any point on the earth's surface
So I answered A. The Equator which wrong, acc to the soln manual. The correct answer is B. The North Pole and reasoning given is that when a person is at the equator he/she is in uniform circular motion because the earth rotates. This motion creates a force that cancels out some of the impact of gravity. When a person is standing on the Norht Pole, the are not in uniform circular motion, so the force the feel is purely gravitational.
I guess if I think about this intuitively it makes sense but when I draw a FBD (which I think im doing wrong, so please help!) it definitely does not make this any clearer to solve.
If the persons weight (mg) point to the earth and centripetal force (mv^2/r) point towards the center of earth's rotational axis, they make both the weight and centripetal force pointing in the same direction. So shouldn't they *increase* the net force acting on that person?
Please help me understand this!
Thanks
A. The Equator
B. The North Pole
C. Midway between the Equator and The North Pole
D. The person's weight will be the same at any point on the earth's surface
So I answered A. The Equator which wrong, acc to the soln manual. The correct answer is B. The North Pole and reasoning given is that when a person is at the equator he/she is in uniform circular motion because the earth rotates. This motion creates a force that cancels out some of the impact of gravity. When a person is standing on the Norht Pole, the are not in uniform circular motion, so the force the feel is purely gravitational.
I guess if I think about this intuitively it makes sense but when I draw a FBD (which I think im doing wrong, so please help!) it definitely does not make this any clearer to solve.
If the persons weight (mg) point to the earth and centripetal force (mv^2/r) point towards the center of earth's rotational axis, they make both the weight and centripetal force pointing in the same direction. So shouldn't they *increase* the net force acting on that person?
Please help me understand this!
Thanks