What is the radial acceleration of an object at the earth's equator? Give your answer as a fraction of g

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The radial acceleration of an object at the earth's equator can be calculated using the formula:

aradial = ω^2 * r

where ω is the angular velocity and r is the radius of the Earth.

The angular velocity of the Earth is approximately 2π radians per 24 hours. In terms of seconds, this is:

ω = (2π radians/24 hours) * (1 hour/60 minutes) * (1 minute/60 seconds) = (2π/86400) radians per second

The radius of the Earth is approximately 6,371,000 meters.

Using these values, we can calculate the radial acceleration:

aradial = (2π/86400)^2 * 6,371,000 m

aradial ≈ 0.0337 m/s^2

To express this as a fraction of g, we divide the radial acceleration by the acceleration due to gravity at the Earth's surface (approximately 9.8 m/s^2):

Fraction of g = 0.0337 m/s^2 / 9.8 m/s^2

Fraction of g ≈ 0.0034

Therefore, the radial acceleration of an object at the Earth's equator is approximately 0.0034 times the acceleration due to gravity.