Would a Bird Be Able to Fly on The Moon?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Justhelp
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Bird Moon
AI Thread Summary
A bird fitted with a breathing apparatus would not be able to fly on the moon due to the lack of atmosphere, which is essential for generating lift. While the moon has gravity, the absence of air means there is nothing for the bird to push against to achieve flight. The discussion highlights that this scenario does not violate Newton's laws of motion, but rather illustrates that the conditions necessary for flight are not met. Some participants suggest that if the question were framed differently, such as considering a bird in low orbit, it could theoretically "fly" in a non-traditional sense. Ultimately, the consensus is that a bird cannot utilize its biological capacity for flight on the moon.
Justhelp
Messages
43
Reaction score
0

Homework Statement



The bird is fitted with a breathing apparatus, released on the moon could it fly?

Homework Equations



It doesn't violate any of Newtons laws, but I could be missing something.

The Attempt at a Solution



The best answer that is listed is that the question is in error.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Does the moon have an atmosphere?
 
What are the forces acting on a bird as it flies?
 
Justhelp said:
It doesn't violate any of Newtons laws, but I could be missing something.
What's your reasoning?
 
The moon has gravity. And I don't see how the laws of motion could be changed.
 
Here is another, a feather and a coin are dropped on the moon from the same height which hits sooner? I know I have to take the moon's gravity into account. Is there a formula to solve this?

I'd like to think they would drop at the same time because of no wind resistince?
 
Justhelp said:
The moon has gravity. And I don't see how the laws of motion could be changed.

The gravitational pull is not what keeps a bird up. How does a bird on Earth stay aloft?
 
By air.. And there is no wind resistance from what I concluded with in the other problem..
 
Justhelp said:
The moon has gravity. And I don't see how the laws of motion could be changed.
The laws of motion are certainly not changed on the moon. Does the moon have what is required for a bird to fly? How do they fly anyway?
 
  • #10
Can a fish swim without water? Can a bird fly without air? Just a hint @ OP.
 
  • #11
No, the bird would not be able to fly. Violating Newtons second law then?
 
  • #12
Justhelp said:
No, the bird would not be able to fly. Violating Newtons second law then?

why do you think a law would be violated?
 
  • #13
The choices are violating Newtons 1st, 2'd, or 3rd law or no gravity on the moon or the question is in error. I think the 2'd law because accel=net force/ mass, accel. would be low enough the bird could not fly? I am still thinking.
 
  • #14
I have to right now. Thank you for any further help.
 
  • #15
If those are the only options, the question was not posed with the correct answer.

If the question is posed as "IF a bird were to fly on the moon, what laws of physics would be violated", then there is a solution. If there is no air, there is nothing for a bird to apply any forces to to keep aloft.
 
  • #16
Technicality: the bird could be placed in a low orbit around the moon complete with breathing apparatus.

So yes, a bird *can be made to* fly astronautically on the moon but not using its innate biological capacity for aerodynamic flight.
 
  • #17
I think it violates Newton's 3rd. Law. Action up reaction none. As in conservation of momentum.
Once you violate the law, it becomes unphysical. If a ghost can push you down, but you can't push him/her back then the ghost is unphysical.
 
Last edited:
  • #18
azizlwl said:
I think it violates Newton's 3rd. Law. Action up reaction none. As in conservation of momentum.

Depends on how you define "fly". How much time should one be in the air in order to "fly".
 
  • #19
dimension10 said:
Depends on how you define "fly". How much time should one be in the air in order to "fly".

If it glides, it needs 3rd law too.
Maybe it just orbiting the moon at low altitude.
Radius of the moon, 1,737.10 km (0.273 Earths)
Acceleration say 1/3 of g.

mg=0.5mv2/r
v≈3km/sec.

I don't know of any bird can fly that fast.
 
Back
Top