No. The center of gravity of a wedding ring is in the space at the center of the ring.
The center of gravity of the letter ' V ' is somewhere along the vertical line between
the two slanted lines.
No. For example, a ring has a center of gravity in the center of the ring, not on any part of the ring.
For a single body, the center of gravity (center of mass) must be within the object. It is the single point at which all of an object's mass can be considered to act. For multiple bodies in a system, the center of mass can fall within a body or anywhere between bodies. The joint center of mass is called the "barycenter."
The center of gravity for a spherical object is located at its geometric center, which is also the center of the sphere. This point is equidistant from all points on the surface of the sphere, making it the point where the force of gravity can be considered to act.
No. The classic counterexample is the torus (ring-shape); the center of gravity is in the geometric center of the ring, which is NOT part of the ring.
No, the gravity between Jupiter and its moons acts towards the centre of Jupiter.
No, the center of gravity of a meterstick is not always located at the 50-cm mark. The center of gravity of an object is the point where its weight is considered to act. For a uniform meterstick, the center of gravity will indeed be at the 50-cm mark because of its uniform density distribution, but if the density distribution is not uniform, the center of gravity could be located at a different point.
It is always different depending on the object. For example a female humans' center of gravity is in the hip. as a male humans' center of gravity is in the chest. But once you have found the center of gravity in an object the center of gravity should be the same in every object like it.
No, the center of gravity of a solid body may not always lie within the body. It depends on the distribution of mass within the body. If the mass is distributed symmetrically, then the center of gravity will be located within the body. However, if the mass distribution is asymmetrical, the center of gravity may lie outside of the body.
No. For example, a ring has a center of gravity in the center of the ring, not on any part of the ring.
For a single body, the center of gravity (center of mass) must be within the object. It is the single point at which all of an object's mass can be considered to act. For multiple bodies in a system, the center of mass can fall within a body or anywhere between bodies. The joint center of mass is called the "barycenter."
If you were observing the ball from the outside (of the ball) the center of gravity is in the middle of the basketball.
Only if the object is homogeneous, i.e. the mass is uniformly distributed. If the object is lumpy, or has thick spots and thin spots, then the center of gravity isn't related to the geometric shape. Consider a see-saw with a light kid on one end and a heavy kid on the other end. The geometric center is the mid-point of the board, but the center of gravity is closer to the heavy kid.
Only objects that have the exact size, shape, mass and density distribution can have the same center of mass. Any variation and the center of gravity would move. Furthermore, only objects that are geometrically symmetrical (think sphere) can have a center of gravity at their geometric center.
In ballet, he center of gravity should always be in the middle of your body, no matter what you are doing.
The force of gravity acts towards the center of mass of the object in question.
Objects will always be pulled to the center of the mass.
The center of gravity for a spherical object is located at its geometric center, which is also the center of the sphere. This point is equidistant from all points on the surface of the sphere, making it the point where the force of gravity can be considered to act.