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A 72.0 kg man weighs himself at the north pole and at the equator. It is said that you will weigh more at the north pole. How much more will you weight at the north pole then at the equator?

2007-03-26 15:51:35 · 5 answers · asked by RelientKayers 4 in Science & Mathematics Physics

human intuition will say the same weight but according to physics its wrong....ignore the ice..its the direction of the normal and weight that matters

2007-03-26 15:58:42 · update #1

5 answers

Since you are probably comparing weight at sea level over open ocean with similar crust and mantle to make all things otherwise equal, you will weigh a bit more at the pole, since the earth is an oblate spheroid, and the distance to the center is less at the pole.

http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/question.php?number=310

(Other answerings should research before they post!)

2007-03-26 16:01:10 · answer #1 · answered by Jerry P 6 · 0 0

The equator is shifting swifter than the poles and so extends outward somewhat via centrifugal tension. meaning a ingredient on the equator is a tiny bit farther from the centre of the Earth than the poles. The gravitational acceleration on the equator is 9.789 m/s^2m, and 9.832 m/s^2 on the poles.

2016-12-15 09:43:26 · answer #2 · answered by hergenroeder 4 · 0 0

Should be the same, the Earth's gravitational pull is a constant, it doesn't vary in one place or another.

2007-03-26 15:54:31 · answer #3 · answered by Fluffington Cuddlebutts 6 · 0 1

you would weight the same amount. the gravitational pull of the earth does not change with the location.

2007-03-26 15:58:09 · answer #4 · answered by unknown_assasin03 2 · 0 2

depends on how much ice is built up on you

2007-03-26 15:54:21 · answer #5 · answered by mlkirchgessner 5 · 1 0

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