Physics, asked by Aartikmari7166, 11 months ago

An astronaut accidently gets separated out of his small spaceship accelerating in inter-steller space at a constant rate 100 ms^{-2}. What is the acceleration of the astronaut at the instant after he is outside the spaceship?

Answers

Answered by aestheticguy3
6

Answer:

Zero.

By the first law of motion, the acceleration must be zero.

Given there are no near by starts to exert gravitational pull, and the small spaceship exerts negligible gravitational attraction on him, the net force acting on the astronaut, once he is out of the spaceship, is zero.

Answered by Anonymous
1

HLO MATE HERE U GO

. Since there are no nearby stars to exert gravitational force on him and the small space ship exerts negligible gravitational attraction on him the net force acting on the astronut once he is out of spaceship is zero . by the first law of motion the acceleration of the astronut is zero .

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