Moon....

Jun. 11th, 2013 10:49 pm
asterroc: (Astro - 2MASS)
[personal profile] asterroc
My students this semester found this question more challenging than they usually do. It's small number statistics and all, but I'm curious what y'all think. Please answer before viewing other people's answers, and if you care to explain your reasoning in the comments, I'd love to see.

[Poll #1918673]

Date: 2013-06-12 08:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sildra.livejournal.com
The slowing effects of the atmosphere on Earth are actually very small on something the size and shape of a pencil, until you get to very high speeds. Meanwhile the moon is orbiting the Earth, which is equivalent to being in free fall, so something on the surface of the moon doesn't experience gravity from Earth (except as a tidal force). So the only non-negligible consideration is the first one you said: that there is gravity on the moon, but less than on Earth, so the pencil will fall but more slowly.

(Also, Earth's gravity would pull in the opposite direction of the moon's gravity on the side of the moon facing the Earth, but on the far side of the moon it would be pulling in the same direction.)

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