Solve Free Fall Question: Earth vs Moon Gravity

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The discussion focuses on solving a free fall problem comparing gravity on Earth and the Moon. It emphasizes that the Moon's gravity is one-sixth that of Earth's, affecting the time it takes for objects to fall. Participants suggest using the correct equations for time, specifically y = 0.5gt^2, and clarify that the initial velocity (v0) is zero since the objects are dropped from rest. The conversation highlights the need to set up the equations correctly for both scenarios to find the correct relationship between the fall times. Ultimately, the solution hinges on understanding the differences in gravitational acceleration between the two celestial bodies.
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The moon's gravity is about one sixth of the Earth's. (Basically, one sixth of 9.80m/s^2). If two objects were dropped at the same height on the Earth and on the Moon, the time it would take for the object to reach the surface of the moon compared to the Earth is...
a) 6
b) 36
c) Square root of 6

I can't figure it out. I tried using the formula:
v^2 = -2g(Yo-Y)
but i got some really weird answers. Any help please? :S
 
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Well, the question is asking you about the time it takes to fall. So you should start by using an equation that contains time.
 
oh yeah whoops, wrong formula.. i tried using y = v0*t - 0.5gt^2

sorry my bad
 
well, what is v0 in this problem? Hint: the object is initially being held at rest at some height and then is just dropped/released.
 
so the initial velocity is 0m/s..
 
then we have y = 0.5gt^2
and when i did it for both the Earth and the Moon, i got two really weird answers that aren't part of any of the choices..
 
SHOW us what you did.
 
Johnny_07 said:
then we have y = 0.5gt^2
and when i did it for both the Earth and the Moon, i got two really weird answers that aren't part of any of the choices..

Step back a bit. There are two scenarios,

1 on Earth) y(1) = v0(1) X t(1) + 9.8 X g X t(1)^2
2 on Moon) y(2) = v0(2) X t(2) + (9.8/6) X g X t(2)^2

Now, what do you know about y(1), y(2), v0(1), and v0(2)?
 
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