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What a Spitball Does
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Question:
Why and how does a spitball affect the flight of a baseball?
give the pitcher such an advantage?
Replies:
See the book by Robert Adair, "The Physics of Baseball", published by
Harper & Row. He discusses spitballs, among many other things.
knowledge of other galaxies
Question: How are scientists able to see and know the activity of outer
galaxies? How are scientists able to know how far away stars are?
How are scientists able to know what stars are composed of?
debbie h kwon
Answer: Astronomers use telescopes to see things far away - does that
answer the first question? There are all kinds of telescopes
(visible, radio, infrared, x-ray, space-based, ground-based,
mountain-based..., single-lens, single-mirror, multiple-mirror,
multi-site interferometers etc.) but they all work kind of
the same way: you point it at somewhere in the sky and look
at what kind of electromagnetic signals are coming from there.
Distance can be determined very directly for nearby stars by
a technique called parallax - as the earth goes around the
sun the star looks like its moving, and the extent of the motion
goes down inversely with distance. For further stars there
are a whole sequence of things based on "color" (see next answer)
and type of star that seem to follow very standard rules.
What stars are made of is determined through "spectroscopy"
which is a detailed analysis of the different wavelengths of
light coming from the stars. Different elements emit
or absorb light at very special wavelengths, and thus leave
their "signature" in the light coming from the star.
Arthur Smith
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Update: June 2012
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