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curious,work wit me on thiswat about a cotton ball

2007-03-03 19:03:16 · 8 answers · asked by Book of Changes 3 in Science & Mathematics Physics

wouldn't less gravity mean less weight

2007-03-03 19:08:40 · update #1

wat if they were dropped from 1000 ft.

2007-03-03 19:46:03 · update #2

8 answers

The moon has 1/6 the gravity of Earth.
The paper clip would fall proportionately slower on the Moon than on Earth.
"weight" is a measure of the gravitational pull between two objects. So of course objects would weigh much less on the moon.

2007-03-03 19:12:33 · answer #1 · answered by GeneL 7 · 0 1

A paperclip, being somewhat dense, would have very little air resistance and would therefore fall faster on the Earth.

However, the question about the cotton ball gets a little more complex. I don't really know the answer to that. I suppose it would really depend on how "fluffed out" the cotton ball is.

Basically, the question comes down to the ratio of the air resistance to the difference between the gravitational constants of the earth and the moon. Above a certain level of air resistance, it will fall faster on the moon, and below it, it will fall faster on the earth.

2007-03-03 19:10:12 · answer #2 · answered by Ryan S 2 · 0 1

On earth, any object would fall much faster than on moon since the gravity is about 6 times more on earth than on moon. The air resistance can be ignored for paper clip, but for the cotton ball, the air resistance may be significant and needs to be factored into consideration. The moon has no atmosphere and hence there, the buoyancy effects of air and the air resistance are not to be considered. Since only gravity is to be considered on moon, any object droped there will need more time to reach the lunar surface.

2007-03-03 19:46:37 · answer #3 · answered by Swamy 7 · 1 1

It does no longer because the gravity of the earth out training that of the moon so in reality the moon could fall onto the earth, and it may fall as quick as something it truly is falling 362 feet in line with 2d i imagine, or something like that, yet what could likely be more suitable significant is that the consequent impression could be sufficient to crack more suitable than 1 / 4 of our planet off. Many scientists have self belief the moon broke off of the earth in the course of the picture voltaic platforms primordial ranges by technique of asteroid impression.

2016-12-05 05:26:14 · answer #4 · answered by youngerman 4 · 0 0

paper clip will fall slowly on moon then on earth because acceleration by gravity by moon has be less than that of earth but for Cotton ball will float more in the air of earth than that of moon because of thick atmosphere of earth than moons
more gravity more weight true

2007-03-03 19:33:45 · answer #5 · answered by Dr Umesh Bilagi 2 · 0 1

All things being equal, any object would fall faster on the earth than on the moon.

2007-03-03 19:12:08 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

there wouldn't be any huge difference. Earth's atmosphere might slow the paperclip down fractionally, but things all fall at the same rate regardless of wieght... so being on the moon probably wouldnt make a difference.

2007-03-03 19:07:06 · answer #7 · answered by lonleyrunner 1 · 0 3

anything will fall fast on the earth, there is more gravitational pull on earth

2007-03-03 19:05:59 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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