Please read chapter 6 - Skim 6.1-6.2 (ie, you do not need to take notes on vocab from these sections), focus more intently on 6.3-6.6, especially 6.6. What questions do you have?
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Question 2
2.
Match the term: rotatation of an object with its orbit.
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Corresponding Item
Tidal bulge
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Deformation caused by gravitational forces between celestial bodies
Eclipse
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Temporary dimming of one celestial body by another
Tidal braking
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Gradual slowing down of rotation due to tidal forces
Synchronous rotation
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Rotates at the same rate as orbit
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Question 3
3.
How do astronomers believe the moon was formed?
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Question 4
4.
The effect of tidal braking of the earth caused by the moon would eventually lead to
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Question 5
5.
why will an astronauts' footprint last so long on the surface of the moon?
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Question 6
6.
The sun produces a smaller tide than the moon, even though it is significantly larger than the moon. Why?
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Question 7
7.
You are working on an online design project on something like canva. You bring in an image and you scale it up before you put it where you want it to be. What does this mean?
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Question 8
8.
What do you think is the relationship between the word scale in this context and the word scalar?
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Question 9
9.
What physics teachers get wrong about tides
Do you have any questions
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Question 10
10.
The video says that if the center of the earth is the inertial frame of reference, the water at the far side from the moon moves further away from the center. If the inertial frame is the moon, however
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Question 11
11.
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Question 12
12.
Which is the most accurate way to measure the distance to the moon?
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Question 13
13.
Which of the following force vectors is primarily responsible for the tides?
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Question 14
14.
The tidal force video described tides as more a squeezing caused by pressure at the sides of the planet than stretching along the line from the planet to the moon. Can you define pressure?
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Question 15
15.
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Question 16
16.
Honors: If you want to decompose a vector into two perpendicular components using what you remember from basic trig back in geometry class, you would use the equations
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Question 17
17.
You are in a car with your brother, who is tossing a ball up in the air. You pass your friend on the road. If you choose yourself as the inertial frame of reference do you feel like
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Question 18
18.
In order to watch the astronomy video I want you to see, you are going to need some basic physics. First - the idea of frames of reference.
Do you have any questions?
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Question 19
19.
Spend a little time playing with this phet simulation (you may also want to work on it outside this formative so you can go full screen. here https://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulations/vector-addition/teaching-resources
try to add and subtract vectors in 1 d, add and subtract vectors in 2d.
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Question 20
20.
A laser pulse takes 2.56 seconds to travel from earth to the moon and return. Given that the speed of light is 300,000 km per second, how far away is the moon?
Honors: you should be able to do this without the hint.
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Question 21
21.
Second - what is a vector? Just worry about the first 6.5 minutes.