ChatterBank0 min ago
Weight on the earth
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No best answer has yet been selected by Dizzieblonde. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.besides the earth weighs: Estimated Weight (mass) (5,940,000,000,000,000,000,000 metric tons).
so im not sure what ever we build will make a significant difference.
Anyone else feel free to give a more educated answer!
im just as curious as the dizzieblonde ;)
because of the weightlessness in space, if u look at it logicly, the earth wouldnt acuarily weigh anything and the gravity isnt too strong so the planet would just collapse on it self. it could be geting slower but because of alot of the ice melting in the poles, those bits are gettin lighter. but as all the earth's resourse were on the earth to begin with, when we use the resources, it doesnt get any heavier. Yes?
By the way, im 11.
when we combine different materiels, we sometimes make them heavier, but we are taking away other recources. But again therioeticly, because of all the more babies being born that people dying, and the sewage waste building up, there probably will be a dramatic increase in the earths weight.
Thanks 4 listein' folks!
The total mass of the earth and all its surface-based things can never increase unless something is added from outside our atmosphere. like a meteor.
Likewise, the mass of the earth will only decrease if we keep sending satellites and space-stations into space.
Yes there are lots of babies and they all make poo, but this has all derived from the food they or thier mothers have eaten which has come from the earth.
The earth's �weight� as quoted only holds good under its own gravity. If it were to be weighed elsewhere (say on the surface of the Sun) the measurement would be considerably different.
Just to add to the confusion:
The gravitational attraction between the Earth and the Moon has locked the moons rotation to that of the Earth�s. The Moon, although considerably smaller, is having a similar effect and is gradually slowing the Earth's rotation.
In principle, a balance scale would indicate the same weight for a given object on the Earth as on the Moon since the counterweight would be equally effected by the difference in gravity.
The Earth's rotation IS slowing down, due to transfer of its rotational momentum to the Moons orbital momentum. This also means, via the laws of conservation of momentum, that the Moon is receding away from us. But once the length of our day (as measured by 1 earth revolution) matches the length of a month (measured by the 1 orbital revolution of the moon), the Earth's rotation will then stay constant.
Oh, and the Earth's weight is increasing all the time, due to the interstellar medium of dust and gas through which it travels. Estimates say this can be up to several hundred tons per day. This is far more than any losses.