Chapter 3: Problem 23
Galileo came up with the concept of inertia. What do we mean by inertia?
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Chapter 3: Problem 23
Galileo came up with the concept of inertia. What do we mean by inertia?
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
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When riding in a car, we can sense changes in speed or direction through the forces that the car applies on us. Do we wear seat belts in cars and airplanes to protect us from speed or from acceleration? Explain your answer.
During the latter half of the 19 th century, a few astronomers thought there might be a planet circling the Sun inside Mercury's orbit. They even gave it a name: Vulcan. We now know that Vulcan does not exist. If a planet with an orbit one-fourth the size of Mercury's actually existed, what would be its orbital period relative to that of Mercury?
Planets with high eccentricity may be unlikely candidates for life because a. the speed varies too much. b. the period varies too much. c. the temperature varies too much. d. the orbit varies too much.
Go to the Museo Galileo website and view the exhibit on Galileo's telescope (http://www.museogalileo.it/en/explore/ exhibitions/pastexhibitions/galileostelescope.html). What did his telescope look like? What other instruments did he use? From the museum page you can link to short videos (in English) on his science and his trial (http://catalogue museogalileo.it/index/VideoIndexByThematicArea.html#s7). For example, click on "Galileo's micrometer": How did he measure the separation of the moons from Jupiter? How did this measurement allow him to show that the moons obeyed Kepler's law? Why is Galileo often considered the first modern scientist? Why is his middle finger on display in the museum?
An inferior planet is one that is a. smaller than Earth. b. larger than Earth. c. closer to the Sun than Earth is d. farther from the Sun than Earth is.
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