Given Newton's gravity formula, #F=G*(M*m)/(r^2)#, what are the SI units of the universal gravity constant, #G#? Physics Circular Motion and Gravitation Newton's Law of Gravitation 1 Answer Andy Y. Mar 19, 2016 #G# has the SI units #m^3/(kg*s^2)# Explanation: #F# is the force of gravity: #(kg*m)/s^2# #M# and #m# are masses, in #kg# #r# is the distance between the masses, in #m# (meters) This gives #(kg*m)/s^2 = G xx (kg^2)/(m^2)# #m^2*(kg*m)/s^2 = G xx kg^2# #m^2*(kg*m)/s^2*1/k^2 = G# #m^2*(cancel(kg)*m)/s^2*1/k^cancel(2) = G# #(m^3)/s^2*1/k = G# #G = m^3/(kg*s^2)# Answer link Related questions How is Coulomb's law different than Newton's law of gravitation? Which of Newton's laws states that an object with no net force will remain in rest or in... How does the law of universal gravitation apply to planet motion around the Sun? What is gravitation? What body exerts the weakest gravitational force on earth? Does gravity push or pull? If object A attracts object B with a gravitational force of 5N from a given distance between the... How does mass affect orbital speed? If a rock is thrown upward with an initial velocity of 24.5 m/s where the downward acceleration... Does gravity cause a change in velocity? why? See all questions in Newton's Law of Gravitation Impact of this question 37412 views around the world You can reuse this answer Creative Commons License