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#32
Drop a sheet of paper and a coin at the same time. Which reaches the
ground first? Why? Now crumple the paper into a small, tight wad and
again drop it with the coin. Explain the difference observed. Will they
fall together if dropped from a second-, third-, or fourth-story window?
Try it and explain your observations.
When a sheet of paper and a coin are dropped at the same time
the coin reaches the ground first. Even though gravity pulls on objects
evenly, the air resistance of the paper is much greater than the coin
and is thus slowed by the air. When the paper is rolled into a tight ball
and dropped with the coin they will drop at the same rate. Gravity not
only pulls on them equally, but the air resistance on the two objects is
the same per body of weight and thus they fall at the same rate. This
would be true for objects at any height as long as they have the same
resistance per body of weight. It is truly a miraculous thing that they
fall at the very specific rate.
There is more surface area acting on the paper per body of weight and
it is thus slower than the book.
#22
Try pushing your fingers together. Can you push harder on one finger
harder than the other finger?
If you push two of your fingers together one will not be pushed
harder than the other. If it is, than both of the fingers will move and
will not be in equilibrium. The forces are exactly 180 degrees different
than each other, which means that they will subtract in strength of
both direction of motion. When you push on them with the same force,
and the same mechanisms on your arms that can only provide equal
strength, then there will be no movement, which proves that you cant
push on your fingers unequally.