Cuesta College, San Luis Obispo, CA
Students were asked the following open-ended question in an online pre-lab assignment, in order to prepare for a lab on determining the mass of Jupiter from the orbital periods and semi-major axes of its Galilean satellites:
[0.2 points.] In your own words, describe Kepler's third law. (Graded for completion.)Students were graded for any non-blank response that demonstrates a serious (or not-so serious) attempt at completing the assignment.
Student responses
Sections 4161, 4162, 4163, 6544
Most responses were correct or nearly correct:
"The squares of the orbital periods of planets are directly proportional to the cubes of the semi-major axis of the orbits."A number of responses discussed Kepler's first or second laws, Newton's laws of motion, or even laws of cooling:
--K. D.
"The farther a planet is away from the sun, the longer time it will take for that planet to orbit the sun once."
--C. R.
"Which one was that... is that the one where all planets... I give up. The first one is about ellipses,... it has something to do with how long planets take to orbit the sun, I think."
--A. R. (1)
"the close ones go faster just like michelle kwan."
--M. M.
"Equal distances are covered in equal times."Some responses went in apparently just for kicks (but still get full "completion" credit):
--A. B.
"It represents the motion of planets around the sun."
--E. D.
"An object in motion will remain in motion."
--J. A.
"Area to volume ratio! yea."
--S. M.
"its a law that kelper made."
--A. R. (2)
"My words dont do this law Justice."
--R. G.
"Drawin' a blank."
--B. M.
"Keplers third law is never talk about keplers first two laws."
--D. F.
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