
FanCartPhysicsSEshorted
... B. Compare the first and third lines of data. How did tripling the force affect the acceleration of the cart? _______________________________________________ C. A cart with two mass units and three fans has twice the mass as a cart with just three fans. How did doubling the mass affect the accelerat ...
... B. Compare the first and third lines of data. How did tripling the force affect the acceleration of the cart? _______________________________________________ C. A cart with two mass units and three fans has twice the mass as a cart with just three fans. How did doubling the mass affect the accelerat ...
Also except answer if student derive for particular two bodies.
... Gravitational Force:The gravitational force is the force of mutual attraction between any two objects by virtue of their masses. It is a universal force. Every object experiences this force due to every other object in the universe. All objects on the earth, for example, experience the force of grav ...
... Gravitational Force:The gravitational force is the force of mutual attraction between any two objects by virtue of their masses. It is a universal force. Every object experiences this force due to every other object in the universe. All objects on the earth, for example, experience the force of grav ...
Unit_3_Part_2_Centripetal_Acceleration_Notes
... you might have to determine that depending on whatever each problem asks of you. Artificial Gravity To live in outer space (not just inhabit the space station for a few months but to actually “live” there), we would need to have a way to provide an artificial gravity (g) so we could go about our “no ...
... you might have to determine that depending on whatever each problem asks of you. Artificial Gravity To live in outer space (not just inhabit the space station for a few months but to actually “live” there), we would need to have a way to provide an artificial gravity (g) so we could go about our “no ...
Artificial gravity

Artificial gravity is the theoretical increase or decrease of apparent gravity (g-force) by artificial means, particularly in space, but also on Earth. It can be practically achieved by the use of different forces, particularly the centripetal force and linear acceleration.The creation of artificial gravity is considered desirable for long-term space travel or habitation, for ease of mobility, for in-space fluid management, and to avoid the adverse long-term health effects of weightlessness.A number of methods for generating artificial gravity have been proposed, as well as an even larger number of science fiction approaches using both real and fictitious forces. Practical outer space applications of artificial gravity for humans have not yet been built and flown, principally due to the large size of the spacecraft required to produce centripetal acceleration.