i assume the 1st post of the this thread stated the question correctly, (i cant predict the student copy the q wrong!)
No but when you say someone is wrong after the person has already posted the question and sample answer, then it shows you aren't reading all the answers.
ok enough is enough.
have a look at what i wrote for that particular question, and then have a look at the answers.
first one is the answer,
second one is an extract from my trials
sorry its upside down.
(assume all parts of the rock stays at the same location as you claimed in the below quote, this equivalent to a rocket staying the same place, losing mass somehow)
The key is that the there is some force of constraint doing whatever it takes to oppose the force of gravity, keeping the object stationary. it looks like GPE should change because the actual magnitude of the force of gravity is changing, but this is irrelevant because there is the force of constraint somewhere.
As soon as this is true, gravity doesn’t get a chance to pull the object anywhere, so it won’t do any work on the rock.
its mass changed probably because of a potential change, but we can definitely deduce that potential change is not gravitational potential change,
and i thought we were assuming all parts remained at the same location, so doesnt that contradict you initial claims?
No the key is that when something is made up or more than one thing it has a total GPE, that is made up of the some of the parts. If you separate it into the parts, then the total remains the same but the individual parts have less than the total overall.
The Catholic answer, which I have said was wrong for another reason as well, was trying to have the students say:
1. The Rocket is a system of fuel and ship
2. As the Rocket is launching, it is expelling the fuel, making the mass of the rocket less by the amount of the fuel being expelled.
3. Thus the mass of the rocket is now less, so the rocket GPE is now less.
IE.
So there are two things effecting the GPE of the rocket, the mass of fuel loss and the increase in distance from planet. Depending on which is occurring at a faster rate, then the GPE of the rocket may go up or down.