Gravitational binding energy: Meaning (information, definition, explanation, facts)

The gravitational binding energy of an object is the amount of energy required to accelerate every component of that object to the escape velocity of every other component. It is also the amount of energy that is liberated (usually in the form of heat) during the accretion of such an object from material falling from infinity.

For a spherical mass of uniform density, the gravitational binding energy is

Where G is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the sphere, and r is the radius of the sphere.

Assuming that Earth is uniform (which is not correct, but is close enough to get an order-of-magnitude estimate) with M = 5.97×1024kg and r = 6.37×106m, U is 2.24×1032J. This is roughly equal to one week of the Sun's total energy output.

According to the Virial theorem, the gravitational binding energy of a star is -2 times its internal thermal energy.

Find more facts
 
Further reference
Remember what Gravitational binding energy means:
Other sources
Search for Gravitational binding energy information on:  amazon.com
Your reference for information, definition
http://explanation-guide.info/meaning/Gravitational-binding-energy.html
Licensing information:
This article uses material from Wikipedia (credits) and is made available under the terms of the GNU FDL (copy).
Image licensing information is accessible by clicking the image.

Welcome, guest!
You are not logged in
ID:
Password:

Social bookmarks


Book search

Recent searches
 » dominic dale
 » curtis sanford
 » weter
 » job achievement
 » utz
 » poker
 » cuddling
 » schon
 » vigilance
 » how to build indian houses