Professor X presented the equation for finding the force exerted on an object by the earth's gravity. It's a classic, lovely little equation...
Me = the mass of the earth, about 1.3 x 1025 lbs or 5.97 x 1024 kilograms. (Do we remember our metric conversions and our scientific notation?)
m = the mass, in kilograms, of some object.
r = how far that object is from the center of the earth.
G = the universal gravitation constant, a sort of cosmic fudge factor, equal to
6.673 x 10-11 N•m2/kg2
(the "N" stands for "Newtons", the unit of measure for force; read as "Newton meters squared per kilograms squared").
A student asked a question: "So, if r = 0, the force is infinite?"
Knowing that we had been taught in our math classes that anytime you divide a number by 0 the answer is ∞, Professor X said, "Yes, if r is 0, Fg is infinitely large."
There are a few reasons why the professor might have responded to the student's question with such an incredibly wrong answer:

