BBC Science Focus

Q&A

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Could you throw a frisbee on Mars? Do seagulls drink seawater? How does exercise reduce stress? These questions and more answered.

FRED WILHELM, US

Students have long been taught that all projectile­s follow a curved path known as a parabola. The explanatio­n is that as they fly, they cover distance both horizontal­ly and vertically – but only the latter is affected by the force of gravity, which bends the path of the projectile into a parabola. For longrange rockets, things are more complex. For example, air resistance must be taken into account. But even ignoring that, a projectile doesn’t really follow a parabola – because the Earth isn’t flat. This means that gravity doesn’t simply pull objects straight back down. Instead, it pulls them towards the centre of the Earth, whose direction changes as the projectile moves further down-range, away from the launch site. Detailed calculatio­ns then reveal that the true trajectory is not a parabola, but part of an ellipse. RM

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