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Brave_Promise_6980 t1_ja9pkgh wrote

Is earth gravity different in Death Valley vs top of Everest ? I mean so altitude play a part adjusting or do we use a constant like light speed is a constant ?

I had thought the closer we got to the Center of the mass the more intense the gravity and the further away the weaker ?

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Ansuz07 t1_ja9q4y3 wrote

> Is earth gravity different in Death Valley vs top of Everest ?

Technically yes - gravitational force does decrease the further you get from the Earth.

However, the distance in question reduces the force by such a minuscule amount that it doesn't matter outside of science or engineering. You have to get very far away to notice - even the ISS, about 250 miles above the surface of the Earth, still experiences about 90% of Earth's gravitational pull.

From the calculations I was able to find, the difference in weight from sea level to the summit of Everest is about 0.4% - and that is about as extreme as you can get and still technically be "on Earth". For most practical purposes, you can treat the force as constant.

Edit: Just to expand on this, the highest city in the world is El Alto, Bolivia, at about 13k feet - half the height of Everest. A 50k lb shipping container would only weigh about 100lbs less if taken from sea level to El Alto - and that isn't a meaningful difference.

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KennstduIngo t1_ja9twbm wrote

>I had thought the closer we got to the Center of the mass the more intense the gravity and the further away the weaker ?

As the other answer said, it is a very small difference. The earth has a mean radius of ~4000 miles while going from Death Valley to the top of Everest is only about 6 miles, so a pretty small change proportionally.

Edit: said diameter instead of radius

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