Physics I: 501 Practice Problems For Dummies (+ Free Online Practice)
Book image
Explore Book Buy On Amazon

Using physics, you can compare the acceleration due to gravity of two different revolving objects. For example, you can compare one planet to another, based on their respective masses and radii.

Here are some practice questions that illustrate this concept.

Practice questions

  1. Researchers at NASA load a 100-kilogram package onto a rocket on Earth. When the rocket lands on the surface of Neptune, where the acceleration of gravity is approximately 1.2 times as great as that on Earth, what will be the package's mass, rounded to the nearest integer?

  2. How many times greater is the acceleration due to gravity at Jupiter's "surface" than at Earth's?

    Use the following data and round your answer to the nearest integer.

    image0.png
  3. A circular space station in the shape of a bicycle wheel has a mass of 1,800 kilograms. It rotates about a central axis 450 meters away from the station's outer ring and takes 30 minutes to make one revolution. What is the acceleration of an object located on the outer ring?

    Round your answer to two significant digits.

Answers

The following are the answers to the practice questions:

  1. 100 kg

    Although the weight of (the force of gravity on) the package differs on the two planets' surfaces, the mass does not differ. The mass of an object stays constant regardless of the forces acting upon it.

  2. 3

    The phrase "how many times greater" indicates that you need to use a ratio to solve this question. You need to know the ratio of Jupiter's gravitational acceleration compared with Earth's:

    image1.png

    Use the relationship that

    image2.png

    where m is the mass of the particular planet and r is the radius of the planet:

    image3.png

    Therefore, the acceleration of gravity at Jupiter's surface is 2.66 (or 3, rounded) times as great as that at Earth's surface.

  3. image4.png

    You can figure out the acceleration of the object on the outer ring from the tangential velocity

    image5.png

    and the radius of the ring:

    image6.png

    Note that the tangential velocity of a point on the outer ring is currently the only value you don't have at your immediate disposal, so use the relationship between distance traveled (in this case, the circumference of the circle made by the object in one rotation of the station) and the time it takes to travel that distance (30 minutes):

    image7.png

    Recall that the circumference of a circle C is equal to

    image8.png

    and convert the time to the desired units

    image9.png

    Now you can substitute everything into the formula you derived earlier to calculate the acceleration:

    image10.png

About This Article

This article is from the book:

About the book author:

This article can be found in the category: