Physics, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

What is Galileo's law of inertia?​

Answers

Answered by Ronney123
3

Answer:

Galileo's law of inertia states: If a body going up moves slower and slower, and a body going down goes faster and faster, a body that neither going up nor going down goes neither slower nor faster; it goes with a constant speed along the same straight line.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Explanation:

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Before Galileo it had been thought that all horizontal motion required a direct cause, but Galileo deduced from his experiments that a body in motion would remain in motion unless a force (such as friction) caused it to come to rest. This law is also the first of Isaac Newton's three laws of motion.Galileo's law of free fall states that, in the absence of air resistance, all bodies fall with the same acceleration, independent of their mass.Galileo thought that a ball, rolling or sliding down a hill without friction, would run up to the same height on an opposite hill. ... Galileo's conclusion from this thought experiment was that no force is needed to keep an object moving with constant velocity. Newton took this as his first law of motion.

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