Guest caulfield01 Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 If say a 1 tonne wieght and a coin were both dropped off a 100 meter tall building at the same time would they both hit the ground at the same time? If yes what is this law called? thanks
insane_alien Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 its called the law of gravitation and yes they would hit the bottom at the same time assuming there is no air resistance if there is air resistancethey would most likely hit at different times
Spyman Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 Is the tall building on Earth or on the Moon ? What the law is called ??? - What do You mean, I call it gravity.
Spyman Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 '']Why would the tall building be on the moon?No air resistance, as insane_alien posted at the same time. (And maybe an old memory from my childhood where an astronaut dropped a feather and a weight on the Moon, in black & white TV-News.) The thread title is "Gravity and Speed" - nothing about air resistance, but on Earth their speed would be depending on their individual air resistance and not their weight, so I just suggested the Moon, a close body without atmosphere (almost), where they would hit the ground at the same time. You could of course drain an elevator shaft from air, or do the test in some other large vacuum camber, here on Earth with the same result.
J.C.MacSwell Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 If say a 1 tonne wieght and a coin were both dropped off a 100 meter tall building at the same time would they both hit the ground at the same time?If yes what is this law called? thanks No If they are the same shape and density the 1 tonne weight hits first. I think the law is reckless endangerment and you go to jail.
calbiterol Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 NoIf they are the same shape and density the 1 tonne weight hits first. I think the law is reckless endangerment and you go to jail. I'm not sure I'm reading you right. If there is no air resistance, then they will hit the ground at the same time. In other words, if you have two identically spheres, one solid and made of pure lead, and you drop them in an environment devoid of air, they'll hit at the same time. I'm not sure what happens when they are the same shape but in an atmosphere. I think that's where the difference comes to play.
Klaynos Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 NoIf they are the same shape and density the 1 tonne weight hits first. I think the law is reckless endangerment and you go to jail. Two objects of identicle dimentions of different densities are effected in an identifle way by air resistance, but due to different densities have a different mass, and hit the ground at the same time. Unless there is some weird gravitaional anomaly which is effecting one of the, which is highly unlikely. I belive this is called the universality of free fall... Although I'm not entirely sure.
losfomot Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 NoIf they are the same shape and density the 1 tonne weight hits first. I think the law is reckless endangerment and you go to jail. I think the 1 tonne weight DOES hit first but only by an immeasurably small amount. For all practical purposes they hit at the same time.
losfomot Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 NoIf they are the same shape and density the 1 tonne weight hits first. I think the law is reckless endangerment and you go to jail. It's a 1 tonne weight and a coin... If we take air resistance out of it, what do shape and density have to do with it?
calbiterol Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 Nothing. If you take air resistance out of it, the only thing that really matters is gravity. Well, that and the fact that there are actually things falling, but that's a given.
J.C.MacSwell Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 Equal densities and same shape and the bigger one should land first. I'm assuming the drag coefficient is the same but frontal area is not increasing proportionally as much as mass.
Newtonian Posted June 22, 2005 Posted June 22, 2005 hasnt anyone seen the hammer and feather experiment.
ydoaPs Posted June 22, 2005 Posted June 22, 2005 http://media.science.discovery.com/fansites/discoveriesthisweek/videogallery/videogallery.html video of objects of different mass falling at the same rate. the clip is called gravity
J.C.MacSwell Posted June 22, 2005 Posted June 22, 2005 It's a 1 tonne weight and a coin... If we take air resistance out of it, what do shape and density have to do with it? nothing
calbiterol Posted June 22, 2005 Posted June 22, 2005 Yourdad, the link you gave was quite good. Not only was the gravity vid quite point-proving, but the other clips were great, too.
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