Urmi Roy said:
I've been pondering what exactly this thing inertia is-why does a body have inertia just because it has a mass? What capability does "matter" in an object have to try and prevent external forces from acting on it?
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On the moon where the gravitational forces are a lot weaker,its easier to lift an object,does it mean that it has less inertia. If it does, inertia is supposed to depend on mass only,so gravitational forces aren't supposed to affect it!
In physics, inertia is "the tendency of a body to maintain its state of rest or uniform motion unless acted upon by an external force".
In common parlance, inertia is conflated with:
- mass (more strictly "inertial mass" which is defined as "the resistance of the matter to acceleration or deceleration, as given by the factor m in Newton's 2nd law F = ma"), and
- momentum (strictly "the product of a body's mass and its velocity" but more loosely "an impelling force")
Mass is certainly something that has inertia, but as DaleSpam pointed out, that is not the whole story, since a container of hot gas has more inertia than a container containing the same amount of cold gas. So the heat itself may have inertia - I say this because the behaviour of hot gas is largely kinetic in nature - I'd more interested to hear whether a hot solid has more inertia than a cold solid.
If heat conveys inertia, then we can say that energy is the deciding factor, not just mass.
Anyway, to better understand, I think it might be worthwhile to do a thought experiment in which there was no inertia. If nothing "resisted" forces on them, everything would be spinning around the universe at maximum speed (because a photon hitting the Earth would be enough to send the Earth off at light speed). That sort of shows that inertia is not something odd, but something completely necessary.
Also, I would have thought that inertia derives directly from the laws of thermodynamics - the energy of a system remains constant, so if you have a small object hit and merge with a large object then the energy ends up distributed across the new system comprising of both merged, the inertia of the now slightly larger large object just reflects the fact that much more energy than exists in the system is required to give it the same velocity that the small object had before the collision.
cheers,
neopolitan
PS About the moon, you're not just talking about the inertia of the object, but also the fact that there is a lesser force already acting on the object you are trying to lift. To lift an object on the Earth you have to overcome not only the inertia of the object but also the force of gravity acting on it - on the Earth that is 9.8 Newtons per kg and on the moon that is 1.6 Newtons per kg. So to give your 10kg object 2m/s
2 acceleration on the Earth, you need to apply (9.8 + 2) * 10 = 118 Newtons. On the moon, that will be (1.6 + 2)* 10 = 36 Newtons. You could, in a rough sort of way, say that the inertia you are overcoming is represented by the 2 * 10 = 20 Newtons - a figure which is, as you say, unaffected by gravity. A problem that would experience on the moon that we don't have so much on the Earth is stopping the thing you are lifting from continuing its upwards motion.