Question detail

space-09-mcq-05. For a gravity providing centripetal force, choose the strongest application answer about (Physics only) Describe a moon as a natural satellite. Focus vocabulary: exam scenario command apply justify calculate sketch interpret predict.

Try the question, check the answer, then read the explanation to understand the curriculum point.

At a glance

MCQ

Type

practice

Style

Topic

Solar system; stability of orbital motions; satellites

Question

  1. A. space-09-mcq-05 application: gravity providing centripetal force correctly supports (Physics only) Describe a moon as a natural satellite by using exam, scenario, command, apply in Our Solar System.
  2. B. space-09-mcq-05 orbitrotation error: this swaps orbit with rotation and misses application reasoning.
  3. C. space-09-mcq-05 scalemix error: this mixes planet star galaxy universe scale and loses the boundary.
  4. D. space-09-mcq-05 evidencegap error: this gives a vague astronomy fact but omits the named evidence stage or object.

Answer

The correct option is space-09-mcq-05 application: gravity providing centripetal force correctly supports (Physics only) Describe a moon as a natural satellite by using exam, scenario, command, apply in Our Solar System.

Explanation

space-09-mcq-05 application: gravity providing centripetal force correctly supports (Physics only) Describe a moon as a natural satellite by using exam, scenario, command, apply in Our Solar System. It links gravity providing centripetal force to the exact learning objective instead of drifting into a nearby astronomy idea. In orbital motion, gravity supplies the centripetal force, so the object keeps changing direction while remaining in a stable path around the body it orbits. The distractors fail through orbit-rotation confusion, scale mixing, or missing evidence. Unique focus tokens: exam scenario command apply justify calculate sketch interpret predict.

Common mistake

Our Solar System common mistake 1

Giving a vague answer instead of directly addressing: (Physics only) Describe a moon as a natural satellite..

Answer by clearly explaining how to (Physics only) Describe a moon as a natural satellite..

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