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holly
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I have a test on Monday. I am still having trouble with the following concepts. ***Please remember I am just taking the physical science kind of physics.***
Q. For the astronauts inside the orbiting space shuttle, there is no force of Earth's gravity acting on them. True or false?
A. Answer given by book: True. Answer given by professor: False. I can follow him, not the book. But I want to be able to recognize this question's main point in case it's on the test in a different guise. There are two legitimate attitudes in physics about weightlessness?
I can't sort out why the book says one thing, the professor another.
Another kind of question involves rocks thrown upward. In general, when a rock is thrown upwards at any angle, the velocity decreases so far as the vertical component is concerned, correct? The horizontal velocity doesn't decrease, correct?
Thank you for any help.
If I have seen farther than most men, it's because I stood on Leibnitz's neck. -- I. Newton
Q. For the astronauts inside the orbiting space shuttle, there is no force of Earth's gravity acting on them. True or false?
A. Answer given by book: True. Answer given by professor: False. I can follow him, not the book. But I want to be able to recognize this question's main point in case it's on the test in a different guise. There are two legitimate attitudes in physics about weightlessness?
I can't sort out why the book says one thing, the professor another.
Another kind of question involves rocks thrown upward. In general, when a rock is thrown upwards at any angle, the velocity decreases so far as the vertical component is concerned, correct? The horizontal velocity doesn't decrease, correct?
Thank you for any help.
If I have seen farther than most men, it's because I stood on Leibnitz's neck. -- I. Newton
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