Measuring Gravity in Your Basement 37
Jack Durian writes "John Walker, the founder of Autodesk/co-author of AutoCAD has some fun playing pretend experimentalist, measuring gravity in his basement."
"Marriage is low down, but you spend the rest of your life paying for it." -- Baskins
Re:He designed autocad, and it shows (Score:1)
It should be clear that the magnetic force is the strongest of the forces.
I seem to remember something about black holes having magnetic fields, and that they are able to escape the pull of "an object with a high enough density", if this is true then the magnetic force is stronger than the gravitational field.
Re:He designed autocad, and it shows (Score:1)
As for black holes, they have no magnetic fields. It's part of the "hair" that they shed on their formation. The only physical properties they have are angular momentum, mass and charge.
Re:He designed autocad, and it shows (Score:3, Funny)
Ahem
*rimshot*
Poor QCD humor, but induldge me -- my company is turning into a dot-bomb.
No! There IS a natural comparison... (Score:1)
Re:No! There IS a natural comparison... (Score:1)
And what's the base unit of mass? A solar mass? Seems natural to me, as an astronomer. In that case, gravity wins. And length? You could claim Plank units, I suppose, but they're not really tied to anything physical, as such.
So before you compare, you need an actual situation set up to look at. This isn't like saying "Blue light has a shorter wavelength than red light." That statment is always true, totally meaningful and useful. Saying "Gravity is weaker than electrostatic forces," is often untrue, not really well-defined in meaning and (being untrue in so many situations we encounter) not useful.
The trouble here is that people just have this inate itch to rank things, even when any such rankings can only be made on a case-by-case basis.
Try to use known problems (Score:2, Funny)
offer him a brand-new barometer if he will tell me
the value of G"
Re:Try to use known problems (Score:2)
Re:Try to use known problems (Score:1)
you'd measure g, not G...
how do you account for em? (Score:1)
Re:how do you account for em? (Score:1)
Unpatriotic (Score:3, Funny)
It's unamerican!
Other fun experiments to try (Score:3, Interesting)
How about... (Score:2, Funny)
Nice experiment - but .... (Score:1)
If not, then as pointed out on the web page, the relative strength of the electrostatic force (which is also inverse square) is far larger than the puny force of gravity and it could swamp the measurement.
For your information, a common way to measure G (the gravitational constant) in the lab is by using an oscillating torsion balance and detecting the frequency change due to the introduction of large masses in the vicinity.
What the heck is a dyne anyhow, what's wrong with good old' SI? NIST [nist.gov] for those interested there's a converter between all the old interesting things like the pole, perch, hogshead, American mile, British mile, American short ton, British long ton and various other devients of the mind Here [ex.ac.uk]
Re:Nice experiment - but .... (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Nice experiment - but .... (Score:2, Informative)
6.67259 (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:6.67259 (Score:1, Informative)
He describes the International Geodetic or Gravimetric Network or something, they have gravimeters about the surface of the Earth or measured readings to get an idea of the varying gals of gravity. A gal is a unit of gravity. Over the surface of the planet it is something like around 980 gals, varying by tens to more of milligals. Normally people think the acceleration of gravity is 9.8 m/s^2, or, -9.8 m/s^2.
http://www.mines.edu/fs_home/tboyd/GP311/MODULE
The Earth is a spheroid oblate. The southern hemisphere is negligably, barely, thicker through the latitudes. Maybe the center of gravity of the galaxy is to the south, or, maybe just this part of the galaxy.
Re:Huh? (Score:1)
Patent problems (Score:2)
Re:Patent problems (Score:1)
The Obvious (Score:1, Insightful)
Sensitive (Score:3, Interesting)
I have trouble believing this setup will work, because
Experiments today are done with a Cavendish apparatus, which very similar to the one shown. Here's a link [washington.edu] with some pics.
This is unreserached thought, so don't come down on me too hard. I am just recalling from my youth
vossman
Re:Sensitive (Score:3, Interesting)
Walker is an interesting character. He has some very cool free-as-in-beer server-side astronomy software on his site, although it's a shame it doesn't seem to be open source. But then, this is a guy who helped found Autodesk, which used hardware dongles to prevent copying...
Re:Sensitive (Score:1)
Of course, that isn't nearly as fun as doing the experiment!
busy busy busy (Score:1)
*Measuring* Gravity in Your Basement? (Score:1)
From the article:
Most misleading headlineDon't bother trying this... (Score:1)
If you're looking for accuracy, you'll have to perform the experiment at least a hundred miles from any type of human civilization, including any streets with cars driving by. Also make sure no planes fly by anywhere in the area, and that there's no wind outside to create vibrations of any sort.
How the current Big G was measured at Los Alamos (Score:2, Informative)
You want to see what Gabe Luther and and William Towler,current "holders" of Big G, used to measure it ? Here's a great shot of the torsion balance device [washington.edu] from this short summary [washington.edu] .
Here's a link to the press room [lanl.gov] at LANL Look for "17) Measuring the Gravitational Constant ("Big G") -- In the Lab of Gabe Luther, Los Alamos scientist. Sound bite on methodology." - no link but an interesting page of resources.