Someone weighs 200 pounds on the surface of the Earth. If the radius of the Earth is 4000 miles, how much would that person weigh 1000 miles above the surface?

1 Answer
Feb 17, 2017

Person will weigh #128# pounds, #1000# miles above the surface.

Explanation:

Weight of an object is the force of gravitation on the object.

As force of gravitation #F# is directly proportional to the two objects, here #m_o#, mass of object and #m_E#, mass of Earth and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. Constant of proportionality being #G#m the gravitational constant.

In other words #F=Gxx(m_om_E)/r^2# and here

#200=Gxx(m_om_E)/4000^2#

i.e. #Gm_om_E=200xx4000^2#

When the person (the object in our case) moves #1000# #km.# above Earth i.e. the distance between them increases to #5000# #km.#, the weight (i.e. the force) becomes

#F=(Gm_om_E)/5000^2=(200xx4000^2)/5000^2#

= #200xx16/25=128# pounds