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I know theoretically it should decrease with $r^2$ increasing in the denominator of the equation, but has any experiment confirmed that this is approximately the change in gravity with altitude variation?

Qmechanic
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Shedbot
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1 Answers1

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Every precision measurement of the moon's orbital dynamics uses that relationship. If it were wrong, so would be those measurements.

niels nielsen
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  • Actually special and general relativity corrections are needed for the gps that depends on the satellites , so there is measurable deviation http://www.astronomy.ohio-state.edu/~pogge/Ast162/Unit5/gps.html to the 1/r2 – anna v Nov 07 '21 at 18:17
  • @annav The article to which you referred addresses how clocks ticking at different rates due to altitude and orbital speed. Corrections to the orbit itself due to relativity do exist but are very small. – David Hammen Nov 07 '21 at 18:34
  • @DavidHammen sure, these are very small also, but measurable, – anna v Nov 07 '21 at 19:55