_Weighing in With Gravity_ 
(http://science.kqed.org/quest/2012/12/28/weighing-in-with-gravity/) 
 Post on Dec 28, 2012 by _Ben  Burress_ 
(http://science.kqed.org/quest/author/ben-burress/)  from _QUEST  Northern 
California_ 
(http://science.kqed.org/quest/stations/northern-california/) 

 
How do you feel today? Heavy as a ton of lead, or a ton of feathers? Light 
on  your feet, or dragging on the ground? It probably depends on a lot of 
things,  most particularly your present physical state, and possibly on a 
pound or two  that you're up, or down, because of holiday eating, or fasting, 
or 
a long list  of other factors.  
Your weight, however, is not just dependent on your diet or your state of  
mind, but in some measure to physical factors beyond your control, like 
gravity  itself.  
_Your weight_ 
(http://easycalculation.com/physics/classical-physics/newtons-law.php)  is the 
product of your actual mass (how much  matter is in your 
body) and the acceleration you experience mostly due to the  force of gravity 
pulling you toward the Earth's center. At the Earth's surface  the force of 
gravity is inversely proportional to the square of your distance to  
Earth's center of mass. So, if you were twice as far from the Earth's center as 
 
you are now, you'd weight one divided by two squared, or one quarter, as 
much.  Of course that would put you almost 4000 miles into space!  
The only thing we ordinary (non-astronaut) humans can do to affect our 
weight  in this way is to climb a mountain, or fly in an airplane, to get 
farther from  the Earth's center. How much lighter would you be, say by 
climbing a 
three mile  high mountain, compared to sea level? As it turns out, about 
0.2%–so a 150 pound  person would weigh about a third of a pound less at the 
top of Mount Shasta than  on Ocean Beach. You'd lose much more weight from 
the exercise alone…. 
Places to avoid if you want to lose weight under the gravitational plan 
would  be Earth's poles, for a couple of reasons. One is that at the poles, 
even at sea  level, you're about 13 miles closer to the Earth's center than you 
are at the  Equator. The reason for this is that Earth isn't a perfect 
sphere, but an  "oblate sphereoid"…in other words, a shape like a ball of 
playdough that you  made into a nice sphere, but then squashed slightly between 
your palms.  
Also, at Earth's poles you don't experience centripetal acceleration (the  
tendency to fly off of a spinning object, be it the rotating Earth or a 
whirling  merry-go-round).  
What's the net weight gain by standing at a pole? About 0.5% heavier, or  
three quarters of a pound for that 150 pound person.  
Finally, there are local variations in the gravity at Earth's surface 
caused  by differences in the density of the materials in Earth's crust that 
account for  weight differences of about 0.01%. You probably sweat off more 
weight than that  reading this blog…. 
Now if you really want to affect a change in weight, go to another planet.  
Due to differences in the size and mass of other worlds your weight can 
vary  drastically depending on which celestial body you choose to plant your 
flag on.  On Mars you'd weigh 38% of your Earth weight, and on the Moon only 
about 17%. If  you could stand on the surface of a gas giant like Jupiter 
(say, on the deck of  a floating gas mining rig), you'd weight over twice your 
Earth weight! And on  Pluto, you'd weigh less than 7% what you're feeling 
right now—maybe as much as  your cat.  
But back on Earth, the sweet spot for weight loss would appear to be a high 
 mountaintop near the Equator. That would be northern Ecuador; book your 
flight  now! Oh, and if you plan your trip there when the Moon is passing 
directly  overhead, pulling you upward with its own gravity, bonus!

-- 
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