Gee Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
- This article is about the unit of acceleration. Gee (navigation) is also the name of a WWII radio navigation device built and implemented by the RAF for use in night bombing. For the Latin alphabet letter, see G.
The symbol g is always written in lowercase, to distinguish it from the symbol G, the gravitational constant, which is always written in uppercase.
The value of g defined above is an average over the whole of the Earth's surface. It is sometimes written as gN or g0 to distinguish it from the local value of g that varies with position.
The actual acceleration of a body at the Earth's surface depends on the location at which it is measured, smaller at lower latitudes, for two reasons.
The first is that the rotation of the Earth imposes an additional acceleration on the body that opposes gravitational acceleration. The net downward force on the body is therefore offset by a centrifugal force that acts upwards, reducing its weight. This effect on its own would result in a range of values of g from 9.789 m/s² at the equator to 9.823 m/s² at the poles.
The second reason is the Earth's equatorial bulge, which causes objects at the equator to be further from the planet's centre than objects at the poles. Because the force due to gravitational attraction between two bodies (the Earth and the object being weighed) varies inversely with the square of the distance between them, objects at the equator experience a weaker gravitational pull than objects at the poles.
The combined result of these two effects is that g is 0.052 m/s² more, hence the weight of an object is 0.5% more, at the poles than at the equator. Thus mass and weight not only have different units, but even on Earth, they are not quite proportional.
If the terrain is at sea level, we can estimate g, at a height h in the air above it:
For flat terrain above sea level a term is added, for the gravity due to the extra mass; for this purpose the extra mass can be approximated by an infinite horizontal slab, and we get 2πG times the mass per unit area, i.e. 0.000,042 mgal/(kg/m²) (the Bouguer correction). For a mean rock density of 2.67 kg/cm³ this gives 0.11 mgal/m. Combined with the free-air correction this means a reduction of gravity at the surface of ca. 0.20 mgal for every metre of elevation of the terrain. (The two effects would cancel at a surface rock density of 4/3 times the average density of the whole Earth.)
For the gravity below the surface we have to apply the free-air correction as well as a double Bouguer correction. With the infinite slab model this is because moving the point of observation below the slab changes the gravity due to it to its opposite. Alternatively, we can consider a spherically symmetrical Earth and subtract from the mass of the Earth that of the shell outside the point of observation, because that does not cause gravity inside. This gives the same result.
Local variations in both the terrain and the subsurface cause further variations; the gravitational geophysical methods are based on these: the small variations are measured, the effect of the topography and other known factors is subtracted, and from the resulting variations conclusions are drawn. See also physical geodesy and gravity anomaly.
The g is used primarily in aerospace fields, where it is a convenient magnitude when discussing the loads on aircraft and spacecraft. For instance, most civilian aircraft are capable of being stressed to 4.33 g, which is considered a safe value. This is much more convenient than saying that it is stressed to 138 ft/s², which would then have to be converted between various measurement standards. The g is also used in automotive engineering, mainly in relation to cornering forces and collision analysis.
One often hears the term being applied to the limits that the human body can withstand without blacking out, sometimes referred to as g-loc (loc stands for loss of consciousness). A typical person can handle about 5 g before this occurs, but through the combination of special g-suits and efforts to strain muscles, modern pilots can typically handle 9 g.
This is an Article on Gee. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Gee Variations of Earth's gravity
where
The last term, 0.3086 mgal/m, is the free air correction: gravity decreases with height, at a rate which near the surface of the Earth is such that linear extrapolation would give zero gravity at a height of one half the radius of the Earth, i.e. the rate is 9.8m/s² per 3200 km.Usage of the unit
