Starter track
Step 2 of 50 / 5 completeGravity and Orbits
Earlier steps still set up Gravitational Potential and Potential Energy.
Previous step: Gravitational Fields.
Concept module
See one source mass create a negative potential well, compare how potential and potential energy change with distance, and connect the downhill slope of phi to the gravitational field on the same live model.
Interactive lab
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Stable links
Starter track
Step 2 of 50 / 5 completeEarlier steps still set up Gravitational Potential and Potential Energy.
Previous step: Gravitational Fields.
Why it behaves this way
Gravitational potential describes how much gravitational potential energy one kilogram of probe mass would have at a point relative to zero at infinity. For one source mass in this bounded lab, the potential is always negative, becomes more negative near the source, and rises back toward zero as the probe moves farther away.
This concept keeps the same one-source geometry as Gravitational Fields so the potential map, contour circles, live readout, scan graphs, worked examples, prediction prompts, and challenge checks all stay tied to one honest model. The field is not a separate rule pasted on top afterward: along the current scan line, the horizontal field component is the downhill slope of the potential graph.
Key ideas
Frozen walkthrough
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View plans2 kg
1.6 m
1.2 m
1. Measure the live source-to-probe distance
2. Apply the one-mass potential relation
3. Compute the current potential
Gravitational potential
Potential-well checkpoint
Make a prediction before you reveal the next step.
Check your reasoning against the live bench.
Common misconception
A negative gravitational potential means gravity is pointing outward or "backward."
The negative sign comes from the reference choice that potential is zero infinitely far away. Closer to the source, the potential is lower than that reference, so phi is negative.
The field still points inward because gravity follows the downhill direction of the potential landscape. A more negative potential means the probe sits deeper in the same inward gravity well, not that the force flips direction.
Quick test
Variable effect
Question 1 of 5
Use the live bench to test the result before moving on.
Accessibility
The simulation shows one source mass fixed at the origin, a movable positive probe mass in a bounded two-dimensional gravity well, and optional overlays for a potential map, equal-potential contour circles, equal-distance rings, the local field arrow, the force arrow on the probe mass, and the horizontal scan line used by the graphs.
Dragging the probe changes the sampled location directly on the stage. The focused probe handle also responds to arrow keys for small position changes, and sliders provide the same controls for source mass, probe position, and probe mass.
Very near the source mass, the display uses a minimum sampling radius so the well depth, arrows, and graphs stay finite and readable. This keeps the visualization bounded while preserving the correct trend that potential becomes more negative and the field grows rapidly near the source.
Graph summary
The potential-energy-scan graph plots gravitational potential and the chosen probe's potential energy along the current horizontal scan line. Hovering the graph previews the same x-location on the stage.
The field-link graph plots the horizontal gravitational field component and the matching negative slope of the potential graph along that same scan line. Changing the probe mass rescales the energy curve, but the field-link graph remains a source-mass and geometry readout.
Connect fields, energy, and orbits
Open the next concept, route, or track only when you want the current model to widen into a larger branch.
See why a circular orbit needs the right sideways speed, how gravity supplies the centripetal acceleration, and how source mass and radius together set orbital speed and period on one bounded live model.
Launch outward from one bounded gravity source and see how source mass, launch radius, and total specific energy decide whether the object escapes or eventually returns.
Map how source-charge sign and distance shape electric potential, compare potential differences across one honest scan line, and connect the downhill slope of V to the electric field.