🌍 Gravitational Potential Energy Calculator
Solve GPE = mgh for any variable, calculate ΔGPE between two heights, and compute gravitational force with Newton's law — all planets included with full step-by-step working and energy unit conversions
GPE for current inputs across all planets simultaneously. Notice Jupiter requires 25× more energy than the Moon!
| Body | Mass (kg) | Radius (km) | g (m/s²) | Relative to Earth |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ☿ Mercury | 3.301×10²³ | 2,440 | 3.70 | 0.377g |
| 🟡 Venus | 4.867×10²⁴ | 6,052 | 8.87 | 0.904g |
| 🌍 Earth | 5.972×10²⁴ | 6,371 | 9.81 | 1.000g |
| 🌕 Moon | 7.342×10²² | 1,737 | 1.62 | 0.165g |
| 🔴 Mars | 6.417×10²³ | 3,390 | 3.72 | 0.379g |
| 🟤 Jupiter | 1.898×10²⁷ | 69,911 | 24.79 | 2.528g |
| 🪐 Saturn | 5.683×10²⁶ | 58,232 | 10.44 | 1.065g |
| 🔵 Uranus | 8.681×10²⁵ | 25,362 | 8.87 | 0.905g |
| 🔵 Neptune | 1.024×10²⁶ | 24,622 | 11.15 | 1.137g |
| ☀️ Sun | 1.989×10³⁰ | 695,700 | 274.0 | 27.94g |
Gravitational Potential Energy Formula — GPE = mgh
Gravitational potential energy is the energy stored in an object due to its position above a reference point. When you lift an object, you do work against gravity — and that work is stored as GPE, ready to be released when the object falls. The gravitational potential energy formula is:
Derived from work done: Lifting an object requires doing work against gravity: W = F × d = mg × h = mgh. This work is stored as gravitational potential energy. The mgh formula applies near Earth's surface where g is approximately constant. For large distances (space travel), use U = −Gm₁m₂/r.
How to Find Gravitational Potential Energy — Step-by-Step
The four-step method for every gravitational potential energy calculation:
GPE = m × g × h = 3 × 9.81 × 1.5 = 44.1 J
Convert: m = 500 g = 0.5 kg
GPE = 0.5 × 9.81 × 8 = 39.24 J
Rearrange: h = GPE/(mg) = 196.2 / (2 × 9.81) = 196.2 / 19.62 = 10 m
Since Weight W = mg: GPE = W × h = 400 × 6 = 2,400 J = 2.4 kJ
When weight in Newtons is given, GPE = Weight × height directly — no need to find mass first.
GPE = 70 × 1.62 × 3 = 340.2 J
Earth comparison: 70 × 9.81 × 3 = 2,060.1 J — 6.05× more energy required on Earth
Units of Gravitational Potential Energy — Joules Explained
GPE is measured in Joules (J) — the SI unit of energy. The unit derives naturally from the formula:
| Unit | Equivalent | Common Use |
|---|---|---|
| 1 J | 1 kg·m²/s² | SI base unit of energy |
| 1 J | 1 N·m | Force × distance |
| 1 kJ | 1,000 J | Engineering calculations |
| 1 MJ | 1,000,000 J | Large-scale energy (dams, power stations) |
| 1 cal | 4.184 J | Heat energy |
| 1 kcal | 4,184 J | Food energy (nutritional Calories) |
| 1 BTU | 1,055.06 J | Imperial heating systems |
| 1 kWh | 3,600,000 J | Electricity billing |
| 1 eV | 1.602×10⁻¹⁹ J | Atomic and particle physics |
Change in Gravitational Potential Energy — ΔGPE = mgΔh
The change in gravitational potential energy formula is ΔGPE = mg(h₂ − h₁) = mgΔh. Only the height difference matters — the reference point cancels out completely.
Conservation of energy connection: In the absence of friction or air resistance, ΔGPE + ΔKE = 0. When an object falls freely:
ΔGPE = 1 × 9.81 × (0 − 10) = −98.1 J (energy released ▼)
ΔKE = +98.1 J → v = √(2 × 9.81 × 10) = 14.0 m/s
ΔGPE = 500 × 9.81 × (3 − 30) = −132,435 J = −132.4 kJ ▼
Speed: v = √(2 × 9.81 × 27) = 23.0 m/s = 82.8 km/h
Work = ΔGPE = 25 × 9.81 × 4 = 981 J ▲
Relative to floor: GPE = 5 × 9.81 × 3 = 147.15 J
Relative to table: GPE = 5 × 9.81 × 2 = 98.1 J
ΔGPE between any two heights = same regardless of reference: 147.15 − 49.05 = 98.1 J ✓
Newton's Law of Gravitation — F = Gm₁m₂/r²
The formula GPE = mgh applies near Earth's surface where g is approximately constant. For large distances, gravitational force varies with distance:
The negative sign in U = −Gm₁m₂/r means GPE is zero at infinite separation and becomes more negative as objects approach — energy must be added to move objects apart. The g = 9.81 m/s² we use every day comes directly from Newton's law:
= 3.986×10¹⁴ / 4.059×10¹³ = 9.82 m/s² ✓ (small variation due to Earth's non-spherical shape)
Numerator: 6.674×10⁻¹¹ × 4.382×10⁴⁷ = 2.924×10³⁷
Denominator: (3.844×10⁸)² = 1.478×10¹⁷
F = 2.924×10³⁷ / 1.478×10¹⁷ = 1.979×10²⁰ N
F = m × g = 70 × 3.72 = 260.4 N (vs 686.7 N on Earth — they weigh 38% as much)
g = GM/R² = 9.81 × (1/0.5²) = 9.81 × 4 = 39.24 m/s² — 4× Earth's gravity
Gravitational Potential Energy and Kinetic Energy — Conservation of Energy
The most powerful application of GPE = mgh is its connection to kinetic energy through conservation of energy:
| Position | Height | GPE | KE | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Top (released from rest) | h₀ | mgh₀ | 0 | 0 |
| Halfway down | h₀/2 | mgh₀/2 | mgh₀/2 | √(gh₀) |
| Bottom | 0 | 0 | mgh₀ | √(2gh₀) |
v = √(2 × 9.81 × 5) = √98.1 = 9.90 m/s
½mv² = mgh → h = v²/(2g) = 225/(2 × 9.81) = 11.47 m
h = L(1 − cos30°) = 1.2 × (1 − 0.866) = 1.2 × 0.134 = 0.161 m
v = √(2 × 9.81 × 0.161) = √3.16 = 1.78 m/s
Real-World Applications of Gravitational Potential Energy
Hydroelectric Power
Water held in a reservoir at height h stores GPE. When released through turbines, GPE → KE → electrical energy. Power = mgh/t. The Hoover Dam generates up to 2,080 MW by releasing 13.1 million litres per second through 180 m of head — converting roughly 23 billion joules every second.
Roller Coasters
The first hill is always the tallest — it provides the initial GPE that powers the entire ride. Each subsequent hill must be shorter because friction losses mean less KE is available. Speed at any point: v = √(2g × height_dropped). A 40 m first drop gives √(2 × 9.81 × 40) = 28 m/s = 101 km/h.
Pile Drivers
A construction pile driver raises a heavy mass to height h, then drops it. GPE = mgh converts to KE which drives piles into the ground. A 2,000 kg hammer dropped 3 m delivers GPE = 2000 × 9.81 × 3 = 58,860 J of impact energy to the pile head.
Rock Climbing Safety
A falling climber's GPE converts to force on the rope. Energy absorbed = mgh where h = twice the distance above the last anchor. Dynamic climbing ropes stretch, increasing stopping distance and reducing peak force. A 70 kg climber falling 4 m generates 70 × 9.81 × 4 = 2,746 J that the rope must absorb.
Pumped Storage Hydroelectricity
During low demand, electricity pumps water uphill (KE → GPE). During high demand, water flows back down (GPE → KE → electricity). Bath County, Virginia stores the world's largest capacity: 3,003 MW from 390 m of head — essentially a giant rechargeable battery using gravity.
Trebuchet Physics
Medieval trebuchets converted GPE of a heavy counterweight into KE of a projectile. Energy = m_counterweight × g × h_drop. The largest trebuchets used 10-tonne counterweights dropped 4 m, storing 10,000 × 9.81 × 4 = 392,400 J — enough to hurl 150 kg stones 300 metres.
Worked Examples — All Calculation Types
Substitute: GPE = 5 × 9.81 × 3 = 147.15 J
In kJ: 0.147 kJ | In cal: 35.17 cal
Earth comparison: 10 × 9.81 × 4 = 392.4 J — 6.06× more on Earth
h = GPE/(mg) = 500 / (8 × 9.81) = 500 / 78.48 = 6.37 m
m = GPE/(gh) = 1,000 / (9.81 × 5) = 1,000 / 49.05 = 20.39 kg
GPE = W × h = 600 × 4 = 2,400 J = 2.4 kJ
(Since W = mg, GPE = mgh = W × h — no need to find mass separately)
ΔGPE = 3 × 9.81 × (0 − 20) = −588.6 J (released)
v = √(2 × 9.81 × 20) = √392.4 = 19.81 m/s
ΔGPE = 15 × 9.81 × (7 − 2) = 15 × 9.81 × 5 = 735.75 J (stored)
Minimum work required = 735.75 J
= 6.674×10⁻¹¹ × 5.972×10²⁶ / 4.059×10¹³
= 3.986×10¹⁶ / 4.059×10¹³ = 981.8 N ✓ (= 100 × 9.81 — consistent)
= 4.281×10¹³ / 1.149×10¹³ = 3.73 m/s² ✓ (matches 3.72 m/s²)
mgh = ½mv² → v² = 2gh
v = √(2 × 9.81 × 8) = √156.96 = 12.53 m/s = 45.1 km/h