Questions for Chapter 4
From the book
1. How does speed
differ from velocity? Explain.
2. What do we mean
by acceleration? What is the acceleration of gravity?
3. What is momentum?
How can momentum be affected by a force? What do we mean when we say that
momentum will be changed only by a net force?
4. What is
free-fall, and why does it make you weightless?
5. State each of
Newton's three laws of motion. For each law, give an example of its
application.
6. What are the
laws of conservation of momentum, conservation of angular momentum, and
conservation of energy? For each, give an example of how it is important in
astronomy.
7. Define kinetic
energy, radiative energy, and potential energy, for each type of energy, give
at least two examples of objects that either have it or use it.
8. Define
temperature and thermal energy. How are they related? How are they different?
10. What do we
mean by mass-energy? Is it a form of kinetic, radiative, or potential energy?
11. Summarize the
universal law of gravitation in words.
12. What is the
difference between bound and unbound orbit? What orbital shapes are possible?
13, What do we
need to know if we want to measure an object's mass with NewtonÕs version of
Kepler's third law? Explain.
14. Explain why
orbits cannot change spontaneously. How can a gravitational encounter cause an
orbit to change? How can an object achieve escape velocity?
15. Explain how
the Moon creates tides on Earth. Why do we have two high and low tides each
day?
16. How do the tides vary with the
phase of the Moon? Why?
17. What is tidal friction?
What effects does it have on Earth? How does it explain the Moon's synchronous rotation?
18. Would you fall at the same rate
on the Moon as on Earth?
Test
Your Understanding
Does It Make Sense?
Decide whether the statement makes
sense (or is clearly true) or does not make sense (or is clearly false).
Explain clearly; not all of these have definitive answers, so your explanation
is more important than your chosen answer.
1. If you bought a
pound of chocolate on the Moon, using a pound scale from a store on Earth,
you'd get a lot more chocolate than if you bought a pound on Earth.
2. Suppose you
could enter a vacuum chamber (on Earth), that is, a chamber with no air in it.
Inside this chamber, if you dropped a hammer and a feather from the same height
at the same time, both would hit the bottom at the same time.
3. When an
astronaut goes on a space walk outside the Space Station, she will quickly float
away from the station unless she has a tether holding her to the station or
constantly fires thrusters on her space suit.
4. I used Newton's
version of Kepler's third law to calculate Saturn's mass from orbital
characteristics of its moon Titan.
5. If we could
somehow replace the Sun with a giant rock that has precisely the same mass,
Earth's orbit would not change.
6. The fact that
the Moon rotates once in precisely the time it takes to orbit Earth once is
such an astonishing coincidence that scientists probably never will be able to
explain it.
8. If an asteroid
passed by Earth at just the right distance, Earth's gravity would capture it
and make it our second moon.
9. When I drive my
car at 30 miles per hour,
it has more kinetic energy than it does at 10miles per hour.
10.Someday soon,
scientists are likely to build an engine that produces more energy than it
consumes.
Other questions
If I change the EarthÕs mass would that change the duration
of the EarthÕs year?