devrimci_kürt Posted November 27, 2009 Posted November 27, 2009 The gravitational and the electromagnetic forces are inverse-square forces.. but, why?
ajb Posted November 27, 2009 Posted November 27, 2009 Because space is a three dimensional. That is the short answer. It comes from Gauss's law and three dimensional space. In different dimensions you get a different dependence. Let us have dimension d. You can show using Gauss's law that the force goes like [math]\approx \frac{1}{r^{d-1}}[/math]. So, we recover the correct dependence for d = 3. For every extra spacial dimension we pick up another factor of [math]1/r[/math].
Mr Skeptic Posted November 27, 2009 Posted November 27, 2009 In fact, lots of laws will give you inverse square relationships in 3D. Largely, if you consider a certain amount of "stuff" spreading evenly throughout the surface area of a sphere, its density will decrease by a factor of 1/r^2. That is because the surface area of the sphere increases by a factor of r^2.
michel123456 Posted November 28, 2009 Posted November 28, 2009 Mr skeptic, could you post the mathematics of that? I suppose that to keep the square proportion,"the surface of the sphere" has zero thickness, isn't it?
Mr Skeptic Posted November 28, 2009 Posted November 28, 2009 Yes, a surface is 2D and so has zero thickness. The surface area of a sphere is [math]A = 4 \pi r^2[/math]. This is basic geometry. Now suppose you have a certain amount, K, of "stuff" on the area of a sphere of a standard radius [math]r_0[/math] (which could be 1 meter for example). The area density of this stuff will be [math]K/A_0 = K/4\pi r_0^2[/math]. Now suppose you end up with a different sphere of radius r, and the same amount of stuff still evenly distributed. This will have a density of [math]K/A = K/4\pi r^2[/math]. The proportion of density will be [math]\frac{K/A}{K/A_0} = \frac{r_0^2}{r^2}[/math], where now the constants disappear. Remember that [math]r_0[/math] was a standard distance, so this is an inverse square law because the variable is [math]1/r^2[/math]. All the densities are inverse square laws with respect to radius, and the ratio between them as well. Now if instead of area you want a thin spherical volume, the same will apply. In this case, just multiply the area by an infinitesimally small value, which will give a volume proportional to the area so long as your thickness is small enough.
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