Chapter 12: Problem 64
Consider a 0.300 -kg apple (a) attached to a tree and (b) falling. Does the apple exert a gravitational force on the Earth? If so, what is the magnitude of this force?
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Chapter 12: Problem 64
Consider a 0.300 -kg apple (a) attached to a tree and (b) falling. Does the apple exert a gravitational force on the Earth? If so, what is the magnitude of this force?
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After a spacewalk, a 1.00 -kg tool is left \(50.0 \mathrm{~m}\) from the center of gravity of a 20.0 -metric ton space station, orbiting along with it. How much closer to the space station will the tool drift in an hour due to the gravitational attraction of the space station?
Compare the magnitudes of the gravitational force that the Earth exerts on the Moon and the gravitational force that the Moon exerts on the Earth. Which is larger?
A scientist working for a space agency noticed that a Russian satellite of mass \(250 . \mathrm{kg}\) is on collision course with an American satellite of mass \(600 .\) kg orbiting at \(1000 . \mathrm{km}\) above the surface. Both satellites are moving in circular orbits but in opposite directions. If the two satellites collide and stick together, will they continue to orbit or crash to the Earth? Explain.
Imagine that two tunnels are bored completely through the Earth, passing through the center. Tunnel 1 is along the Earth's axis of rotation, and tunnel 2 is in the equatorial plane, with both ends at the Equator. Two identical balls, each with a mass of \(5.00 \mathrm{~kg}\), are simultaneously dropped into both tunnels. Neglect air resistance and friction from the tunnel walls. Do the balls reach the center of the Earth (point \(C\) ) at the same time? If not, which ball reaches the center of the Earth first?
With the usual assumption that the gravitational potential energy goes to zero at infinite distance, the gravitational potential energy due to the Earth at the center of Earth is a) positive. b) negative. c) zero. d) undetermined.
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