No, there are slight variations, due to (a) the fact that some points are closer to Earth's center (a.1, you may be on a mountain, and a.2, the poles are closer to the Earth's center), (b) the centrifugal pseudoforce, which gets stronger as you approach the equator, and (c) any gravitational anomaly caused by an uneven distribution of masses.
If the Earth were to stop rotating, the value of 'g' (acceleration due to gravity) would remain approximately the same at the Earth's surface. The rotation of the Earth does not significantly affect the gravitational pull experienced on the surface.
G would remain the same, it's the gravitational constant which is the same everywhere in the universe. g would increase by 4 times, assuming that the radius of the earth didn't increase.
The acceleration due to gravity for a cotton ball is approximately 9.81 m/s^2. This value is the same as the acceleration due to gravity for any object on the surface of the Earth, regardless of its mass or size.
No, the magnetic dip angle varies depending on the location on Earth. It is not the same everywhere in the world due to the Earth's magnetic field not being uniform. The dip angle is steeper near the magnetic poles and decreases as you move towards the equator.
The gravitational field strength at the surface of Earth is approximately 9.81 m/s^2, which is effectively the same as the acceleration due to gravity or the acceleration of free fall. This value is commonly used to represent the rate at which objects accelerate towards the Earth when dropped.
G i.e force per unit mass on the earth surface......YES.because all calculation is approximately 10
No, there would not be winds if the earth's surface was the same temperature everywhere. The reason why is because during the day the land heats up faster than the water.
Sunbeams do NOT strike the Earth's surface at the same angle. Like dusk some places have an angular strike during the winter months. This is the main reason we have seasons.
The gravitational constant "G" is the same everywhere. The force of gravity on the moon, expressed as the acceleration of a falling body is 1.62 metres/sec2. compared with 9.81 m/s2 on the earth.
If the Earth were to stop rotating, the value of 'g' (acceleration due to gravity) would remain approximately the same at the Earth's surface. The rotation of the Earth does not significantly affect the gravitational pull experienced on the surface.
The gravity at the Bermuda triangle is exactly the same as the rest of the earth, affected only by the phases of the moon, exactly the same as the rest of the earth.
The big dipper is the same size from everywhere on Earth, because everywhere on Earth is the same distance from it.
The answer depends on what h is supposed to represent.
yes, the layers beneath earths surface are in the same sequence throughout earth, although certain parts of certain layers may be wider in certain places or slimmer, but they stay in the same sequence
The earth is not perfect sphere therefore the radius differs from place to place and from Newton Gravitational law force is directly proportional to radius
yes becaus ethe wind's definnation is the movement of air cause by diffences in air pussure and if the air pressure says the same than the temperature say the same and the amount of wind is there if the temperature is around the 70's or below.
Gravity behaves exactly the same on the moon as it does on earth. The formula that's used to calculate the gravitational force between two masses is the same formula everywhere. Using that formula, it's easy to calculate that any object weighs about 1/6th as much on the moon as it weighs on the earth.