CONCEPTUAL INTEGRATED SCIENCE (PEARSON+
3rd Edition
ISBN: 2818440059223
Author: Hewitt
Publisher: PEARSON+
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Chapter 2, Problem 68TE
Gravitational force on the Moon is merely
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Chapter 2 Solutions
CONCEPTUAL INTEGRATED SCIENCE (PEARSON+
Ch. 2 - What were Aristotles two main classifications of...Ch. 2 - Did Aristotle believe that forces are necessary to...Ch. 2 - What two main ideas of Aristotle did Galileo...Ch. 2 - Which dominated Galileos way of extending...Ch. 2 - What is the name of the property of objects to...Ch. 2 - Which depends on gravity: weight or mass?Ch. 2 - Where would your weight be greater: on Earth or on...Ch. 2 - What are the units of measurement for weight and...Ch. 2 - One kg weighs 10 N on Earth. Would it weigh more...Ch. 2 - Which has the greater density: 1 kg of water or 10...
Ch. 2 - What is the net force on a box that is being...Ch. 2 - What two quantities are necessary to determine a...Ch. 2 - What is the name given to a force that occurs in a...Ch. 2 - How much rope tension holds a 20-N bag of apples...Ch. 2 - What is the meaning of F=0?Ch. 2 - What test tells us whether or not a moving object...Ch. 2 - One bowling ball sits at rest and another rolls at...Ch. 2 - Why is the support force on an object often called...Ch. 2 - When you weigh yourself, how does the support...Ch. 2 - How does the direction of a friction force compare...Ch. 2 - If you push on a heavy crate to the right and it...Ch. 2 - Suppose you push on a heavy crate, but not hard...Ch. 2 - What equation shows the relationship among speed,...Ch. 2 - Why do we say that velocity is a vector and speed...Ch. 2 - Does the speedometer on a vehicle show the average...Ch. 2 - How can you be at rest and also moving at 100,000...Ch. 2 - What equation shows the relationship among...Ch. 2 - What is the acceleration of an object in free fall...Ch. 2 - Why does the unit of time appear twice in the...Ch. 2 - When you toss a ball upward, by how much does its...Ch. 2 - Joints are places where bones meet. Many of them,...Ch. 2 - In what way does friction affect an earthquake?Ch. 2 - When during a standing jump is your speed zero?Ch. 2 - What is the record-breaking height for a standing...Ch. 2 - What are some anatomical features that affect an...Ch. 2 - Show that the average speed of a rabbit that runs...Ch. 2 - Calculate your average walking speed when you step...Ch. 2 - Show that the acceleration of a hamster is 5m/s2...Ch. 2 - Show that the acceleration of a car that can go...Ch. 2 - Show that the acceleration of a rock that reaches...Ch. 2 - Show that Careless Cary who slips from the rung of...Ch. 2 - Show that a basketball player who jumps vertically...Ch. 2 - The weights of Burl, Paul, and the scaffold...Ch. 2 - Rank the net forces on the block from greatest to...Ch. 2 - Different materials, A, B, C, and D, rest on a...Ch. 2 - Three pucks, A, B, and C, are sliding across ice...Ch. 2 - Find the strength of the net force on a crate that...Ch. 2 - Lucy Lightfoot stands with one foot on one...Ch. 2 - A ball is thrown straight up with an initial speed...Ch. 2 - The sketch shows a painters scaffold in mechanical...Ch. 2 - A different scaffold that weighs 400 N supports...Ch. 2 - A vehicle changes its velocity from 90km/h to a...Ch. 2 - Extend Table 2.2 which gives values from 0 to 5 s...Ch. 2 - An airplane starting from rest on a runway...Ch. 2 - Knowledge can be gained by philosophical logic and...Ch. 2 - Which of Aristotles ideas did Galileo discredit...Ch. 2 - Your friend says that a ball rolling down a flat...Ch. 2 - A ball at the end of a string makes a pendulum. If...Ch. 2 - Which has more mass, a 2-kg fluffy pillow or a...Ch. 2 - Gravitational force on the Moon is merely 1/6 that...Ch. 2 - A monkey hangs stationary at the end of a vertical...Ch. 2 - Suppose the monkey weighs 100 N and the vine...Ch. 2 - Nellie hangs suspended at rest from the ends of...Ch. 2 - Nellie Newton stands at rest on a bathroom scale....Ch. 2 - Can a basketball player halfway through a jump in...Ch. 2 - Little Hudson as shown in the opening photo of...Ch. 2 - An empty 50-N jug rests on a table. What is the...Ch. 2 - A book that weighs 15 N is at rest on a table. How...Ch. 2 - The falling speedometer of Figure 2.24 shows...Ch. 2 - In Figure 2.13, we see Marie pushing horizontally...Ch. 2 - Suppose that a free-falling object were somehow...Ch. 2 - For a free-falling object dropped from rest, what...Ch. 2 - What is the acceleration of a car that moves at a...Ch. 2 - Correct your friend who says, Japans bullet trains...Ch. 2 - An airplane flies horizontally at a constant...Ch. 2 - You toss a coin vertically upward in the air....Ch. 2 - Does a person on a diet more accurately lose mass...Ch. 2 - Gracie says acceleration is how fast you go. Alex...Ch. 2 - Your friend says that a ball in free fall...Ch. 2 - Harry the painter swings year after year from his...Ch. 2 - When a ballplayer throws a ball straight up, by...Ch. 2 - Someone standing on the edge of a cliff as in...Ch. 2 - For a freely falling object dropped from rest,...Ch. 2 - Two balls, A and B, are released simultaneously...Ch. 2 - According to Galileo, inertia is a a force like...Ch. 2 - An object with a very small mass must also have a...Ch. 2 - The equilibrium rule F=0 applies to a objects or...Ch. 2 - A man weighing 800 N stands at rest on two...Ch. 2 - If an object moves along a straight-line path at...Ch. 2 - What is the net force on a box of chocolates when...Ch. 2 - Neglecting air resistance, when you toss a rock...Ch. 2 - During each second of free fall, the speed of an...Ch. 2 - A freely falling object has a speed of 40 m/s at...Ch. 2 - The vertical height attained by a basketball...
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- The gravitational force exerted on an astronaut on the Earths surface is 650 N directed downward. When she is in the space station in orbit around the Earth, is the gravitational force on her (a) larger, (b) exactly the same, (c) smaller, (d) nearly but not exactly zero, or (e) exactly zero?arrow_forwardLet gM represent the difference in the gravitational fields produced by the Moon at the points on the Earths surface nearest to and farthest from the Moon. Find the fraction gM/g, where g is the Earths gravitational field. (This difference is responsible for the occurrence of the lunar tides on the Earth.)arrow_forwardSuppose astronomers find an earthlike planet that is twice the size of Earth (that is, its radius is twice that of Earth’s). What must be the mass of this planet such that the gravitational force (Fgravity) at the surface would be identical to Earth’s?arrow_forward
- In the law of universal gravitation, Newton assumed that the force was proportional to the product of the two masses (m1m2) . While all scientific conjectures must be experimentally verified, can you provided arguments as to why this must be? (You may wish to consider simple examples in which any other form would lead to contradictory results.)arrow_forwardA planet has two moons with identical mass. Moon 1 is in a circular orbit of radius r. Moon 2 is in a circular orbit of radius 2r. The magnitude of the gravitational force exerted by the planet on Moon 2 is (a) four times as large (b) twice as large (c) the same (d) half as large (e) one-fourth as large as the gravitational force exerted by the planet on Moon 1.arrow_forwardA planet has two moons of equal mass. Moon 1 is in a circular orbit of radius r. Moon 2 is in a circular orbit of radius 2r. What is the magnitude of the gravitational force exerted by the planet on Moon 2? (a) four times as large as that on Moon 1 (b) twice as large as that on Moon 1 (c) equal to that on Moon 1 (d) half as large as that on Moon 1 (e) one-fourth as large as that on Moon 1arrow_forward
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- For many years, astronomer Percival Lowell searched for a Planet X that might explain some of the perturbations observed in the orbit of Uranus. These perturbations were later explained when the masses of the outer planets and planetoids, particularly Neptune, became better measured (Voyager 2). At the time, however, Lowell had proposed the existence of a Planet X that orbited the Sun with a mean distance of 43 AU. With what period would this Planet X orbit the Sun?arrow_forwardA 15.0-kg object is in free fall near the surface of the Earth. What is its weight? What is its acceleration? What is the direction of the gravitational force exerted on it? How do your answers change if the same object is at rest on the surface of the Earth?arrow_forwardA satellite is 100 miles above earth. It has a mass og 100 kg. If the mass of the satellite were doubled, the force of gravity of the satellite on the earth would be?arrow_forward
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