DOES GRAVITY PULL HEAVY OBJECTS MORE STRONGLY THAN LIGHT ONES?

As objects are dropped and pulled towards Earth by its gravitational force, they accelerate; travelling faster and faster the further they fall. That is why a person falling one metre might sustain only bruises but a person falling one kilometre would be unlikely to survive. The body would be hitting the ground at a much higher speed. However, an Italian scientist called Galileo Galilei, working some years before Newton, showed that the weight of a body does not affect the speed with which it falls.

Have you ever wondered how fast a heavy object falls compared with a lighter one? Imagine if you dropped both of them at the same time. Which would hit the ground first? Would it be the heavier one because it weighs more? Or would they hit the ground at the same time? In the late 1500s in Italy the famous scientist Galileo was asking some of these same questions. And he did some experiments to answer them. In this activity you’ll do some of your own tests to determine whether heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones.

In fourth-century B.C. Greece the philosopher Aristotle theorized that the speed at which an object falls is probably relative to its mass. In other words, if two objects are the same size but one is heavier, the heavier one has greater density than the lighter object. Therefore, when both objects are dropped from the same height and at the same time, the heavier object should hit the ground before the lighter one.

Some 1,800 years later, in late 16th-century Italy, the young scientist and mathematician Galileo Galilei questioned Aristotle’s theories of falling objects. He even performed several experiments to test Aristotle’s theories. As legend has it, in 1589 Galileo stood on a balcony near the top of the Tower of Pisa and dropped two balls that were the same size but had different densities. Although there is debate about whether this actually happened, the story emphasizes the importance of using experimentation to test scientific theories, even ones that had been accepted for nearly 2,000 years.

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