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iSolveProblems
2 years ago

It is correct (have read the high 9 as 2 if you have seen the answer before my edit). Only the unit of gravitational constants is wrong, you still lack an * m^2 so that it is Nm^2 /kg^2

iSolveProblems
2 years ago
Reply to  Schutzengel854

At the gravity constant. Like myotis wrote.

myotis
2 years ago
Reply to  Schutzengel854

The m2 from r2 have to cut out

So Nm2/kg2

indiachinacook
2 years ago

As far as I see correctly up to the bottle unit of gravity constants. And the number indication in the denominator (779⋅109) is difficult to read, except that this distance naturally fluctuates with the season a little.

Kaenguruh
2 years ago
Reply to  indiachinacook

Okay, I didn’t pay attention to the unit of γ

indiachinacook
2 years ago
Reply to  Schutzengel854

The unit is usually given as m3 kg-1 s-2.
Since 1 N=1 kg m s-2, this can be used and obtained for the gravitational constant
m3 kg-1 s-2 = m2 kg kg-2 s-2 = m2 N kg-2

So your first suggestion is correct, the second is missing the square at the m.

Kaenguruh
2 years ago

All right!