Sign In

14.10 : Potential Energy due to Gravitation

Since gravitational force is a conservative force, the amount of work done to move an object between two points in the gravitational field in which it resides is independent of the path taken. Thus, similar to the gravitational field, a gravitational potential energy function can be defined, which depends only on spatial coordinates.

Consider a mass gravitationally bound to another object. For example, the Earth is gravitationally bound to the Sun’s gravitational field. The potential energy of the Earth in the Sun’s gravitational field is defined such that its value is negative close to the Sun and increases to zero at large distances from the Sun.

Since the Earth and the Sun are not special cases, the result can be generalized for any two objects. Thus, under the influence of gravity, all masses fall from a higher to lower potential energy while their kinetic energies increase. Hence, the definition is consistent with the conservation of energy principle. If the total energy of a system is positive, it is not gravitationally bound.

The magnitude of the potential energy decreases with the distance between the two objects. It is inversely proportional to the distance because of the inverse-square dependence of the gravitational force on the distance.

This text is adapted from Openstax, University Physics Volume 1, Section 13.3: Gravitational Potential Energy and Total Energy.

Tags
Gravitational ForceConservative ForceWork DonePotential EnergyGravitational FieldSpatial CoordinatesMass BindingEarthSunKinetic EnergyConservation Of EnergyGravitational BindingInverse square LawDistanceTotal Energy

From Chapter 14:

article

Now Playing

14.10 : Potential Energy due to Gravitation

Gravitation

2.2K Views

article

14.1 : Gravitation

Gravitation

5.5K Views

article

14.2 : Newton's Law of Gravitation

Gravitation

8.5K Views

article

14.3 : Gravitation Between Spherically Symmetric Masses

Gravitation

673 Views

article

14.4 : Gravity between Spherical Bodies

Gravitation

7.6K Views

article

14.5 : Reduced Mass Coordinates: Isolated Two-body Problem

Gravitation

969 Views

article

14.6 : Acceleration due to Gravity on Earth

Gravitation

9.8K Views

article

14.7 : Acceleration due to Gravity on Other Planets

Gravitation

3.9K Views

article

14.8 : Apparent Weight and the Earth's Rotation

Gravitation

3.4K Views

article

14.9 : Variation in Acceleration due to Gravity near the Earth's Surface

Gravitation

2.2K Views

article

14.11 : The Principle of Superposition and the Gravitational Field

Gravitation

939 Views

article

14.12 : Escape Velocity

Gravitation

2.0K Views

article

14.13 : Circular Orbits and Critical Velocity for Satellites

Gravitation

2.7K Views

article

14.14 : Energy of a Satellite in a Circular Orbit

Gravitation

2.0K Views

article

14.15 : Kepler's First Law of Planetary Motion

Gravitation

3.5K Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved