Anarbaculardrop wrote:
I came up with this thought question and wondered the answer. What are your thoughts on this Idea? Will you be stone dead, or will you just be heavily injured?
Newton's law of gravitation for the gravitational field at some point r from the center of mass of an object is:
g=(GM)/r^2
Where G is the gravitational constant and M is the mass of the object. As you move farther away from the center of mass of the object, g gets smaller, meaning the gravitational field gets weaker. As you move closer, g gets bigger, meaning the gravitational field gets stronger.
The point is, the "acceleration of gravity" is not actually a constant. In most "near Earth" scenarios we only treat it as such. The moon is small enough, and your distance of 200 miles is great enough, that the variability of the gravitational field shouldn't be ignored.
Before we continue, let's look at kinetic energy involved in impacts here on Earth if you were a 160lbs man jumping off of things.
A 1 meter (about 3 feet) box: 712.5984 Joules
6 feet: 1296.929088 Joules
20 feet: 4275.5904 Joules
100 feet: 21662.99136 Joules
Now back to the moon.
I've used Excel to approximate the velocity you would have right before impact. It's somewhere around 939m/s, which is somewhere between the velocity when calculated using the gravitational field 200 miles out, and the gravitational field at the surface.
You would have a kinetic energy of 3.2X10^7 joules
That's 32,000,000 joules.
That's like falling from 27.8 miles here on Earth with no wind resistance to slow you down....if I've not made any mistakes.