Duplicate Question
The question on this page has been marked as a duplicate question.
Original Question
An astronaut drops two pieces of paper from the door of a lunar landing module. One piece of paper is crumpled, and the other p...Asked by Yes.
An astronaut drops two pieces of paper from the door of a lunar landing module. One piece of paper is crumpled, and the other piece is folded into an airplane. Why do the two pieces of paper land on the Moon’s surface at the same time?(1 point)
Responses
The Moon’s gravity is much weaker than Earth’s.
The Moon has practically no atmosphere, so there is no air resistance.
The pieces of paper were not dropped from a sufficient height for air resistance to affect their falls.
The mass of the paper folded into an airplane must be greater than the mass of the crumpled paper.
Responses
The Moon’s gravity is much weaker than Earth’s.
The Moon has practically no atmosphere, so there is no air resistance.
The pieces of paper were not dropped from a sufficient height for air resistance to affect their falls.
The mass of the paper folded into an airplane must be greater than the mass of the crumpled paper.
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct response is: **The Moon has practically no atmosphere, so there is no air resistance.**
On the Moon, the lack of atmosphere means that there is no air resistance to slow down the paper airplane or the crumpled paper. Therefore, both will fall at the same rate and land at the same time, regardless of their shapes.
On the Moon, the lack of atmosphere means that there is no air resistance to slow down the paper airplane or the crumpled paper. Therefore, both will fall at the same rate and land at the same time, regardless of their shapes.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.