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skykooler | 9 months ago

Gravity changes little over that distance - it's more because of the compounding effect of atmospheric pressure (the deeper you go, the more air you have above you which raises the pressure, raising the density and meaning that pressure increases exponentially faster).

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vecter|9 months ago

What makes that curve exponential?

skykooler|9 months ago

Starting at an initial density of air, suppose you descend a distance D such that the air density doubles. Now your air is twice as dense, which doubles the pressure underneath it, meaning if you descend a further D the density will double again. Continue ad infinitum (or at least until the ideal gas law stops being a good approximation).

westurner|9 months ago

Newtonian gravity (classical mechanics).

Two-body gravitational attraction is observed to be an inverse square power law; gravitational attraction decreases with the square of the distance.

g, the gravitational constant of Earth, is observed to be exponential; 9.8 m/s^2.

Atmospheric pressure: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric_pressure#:~:text=P... :

> Pressure (P), mass (m), and acceleration due to gravity (g) are related by P = F/A = (m*g)/A, where A is the surface area. Atmospheric pressure is thus proportional to the weight per unit area of the atmospheric mass above that location.