Gravity Force of a Spherical ShellA classic problem in mechanics is the calculation of the gravity force that would be experienced by a mass m that was attracted by a uniform spherical shell of mass M. The law of gravity applies, but calculus must be used to account for the fact that the mass is distributed over the surface of a sphere. The problem is envisioned as dividing an infinitesemally thin spherical shell of density σ per unit area into circular strips of infinitesemal width. ![]() To set up the necessary integral, the triangle above is used to take advantage of the symmetry of the system. All components of the gravity force perpendicular to r will cancel by symmetry, and all components along r will sum. The differential element of force on mass m can be written ![]() where the differential element of mass dM is given by ![]() The force from the entire spherical shell can be expressed as an integral over the angle θ ![]() To evaluate the integral, the variables s and α must be expressed in terms of the angle θ . Using the Law of Cosines with the interior angle θ gives ![]() and this can be differentiated to give ![]() Now using the Law of Cosines with the external angle α: ![]() With these relationships, we can now express the integral in terms of s instead of θ, using the fact that s = r - R for θ = 0 and s = r + R for θ = π. ![]() Using the area density expression σ = M/4πR2, the integral can be written ![]() Now the parts are evaluated as polynomial integrals and simplified. ![]() This is the desired goal, to show that the force from a thin spherical shell is exactly the same force as if the entire mass M were concentrated at the center of the sphere! Physically, this is a very important result because any spherically symmetric mass distribution can be build up as a series of such shells. This proves that the force from any spherically symmetric mass distribution on a mass outside its radius is the same as if the total mass were a point mass concentrated at the center of the sphere.
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