Answer:
(I)
[tex]{ \bf{s = ut + \frac{1}{2}a {t}^{2} }} \\ 120 = (u \times 2) + \frac{1}{2} \times 0 \times {2}^{2} \\ 120 = 2u \\ { \tt{speed = 60 \: {ms}^{ - 1} }}[/tex]
(ii)
[tex]{ \bf{s = ut + \frac{1}{2}a {t}^{2} }} \\ 240 = (60t) \\ { \tt{time = 4 \: seconds}}[/tex]
The pressure exerted at the bottom of a column of liquid is 30 kPa. The height of the
column is 3,875 m. What type of liquid is used?
Answer:
For example, the pressure acting on a dam at the bottom of a reservoir is ... pressure = height of column × density of the liquid × gravitational field ... The density of water is 1,000 kg/m 3.
A pilot flies her route in two straight-line segments. The displacement vector A for the first segment has a magnitude of 243 km and a direction 30.0o north of east. The displacement vector for the second segment has a magnitude of 178 km and a direction due west. The resultant displacement vector is R = A + B and makes an angle ? with the direction due east. Using the component method, find (a) the magnitude of R and (b) the directional angle ?.
(a) R = km
(b) ? = degrees
Answer:
a) [tex]R=126Km[/tex]
b) [tex]\theta=74.6\textdegree[/tex]
Explanation:
From the question we are told that:
1st segment
243km at Angle=30
2nd segment
178km West
Resolving to the X axis
[tex]F_x=243cos30+178[/tex]
[tex]F_x=33.44Km[/tex]
Resolving to the Y axis
[tex]F_y=243sin30+178sin0[/tex]
[tex]R=\sqrt{F_y^2+F_x^2}[/tex]
[tex]F_y=121.5Km[/tex]
Therefore
Generally the equation for Directional Angle is mathematically given by
[tex]\theta=tan^{-1}\frac{F_y}{F_x}[/tex]
[tex]\theta=tan^{-1}\frac{121.5}{33.44}[/tex]
[tex]\theta=74.6\textdegree[/tex]
Generally the equation for Magnitude is mathematically given by
[tex]R=\sqrt{F_y^2+F_x^2}[/tex]
[tex]R=\sqrt{33.44^2+121.5^2}[/tex]
[tex]R=126Km[/tex]
3. You have a variable-voltage power supply and a capacitor in the form of two metal disks of radius 0.6 m, held a distance of 1 mm apart. What is the largest voltage you can apply to the capacitor without the air becoming highly conductive
Answer:
The breakdown of air occurs at a maximum voltage of 3kV/mm.
Explanation:
The breakdown of air occurs at a maximum voltage of 3kV/mm.
At this level of voltage the air between the plates become highly ionised and breakdown occurs. Since, the distance held between the plates is 1mm , it can withstand a maximum voltage of 3 kV.
After this voltage the air will become conductive in nature and will form ions in the air between the plates and ultimately breakdown will take place with a flash.
When you stand on tiptoes on a bathroom scale, there is an increase in
A) weight reading.
B) pressure on the scale, not registered as weight.
C) both weight and pressure on the scale.
D) none of the above
Answer:
B) Pressure on the scale, not registered as weight.
Explanation:
This is because energy (derived from weight) becomes compiled on the tips of your toes, and therefore does not increase your weight, but simply the pressure at a smaller point
When an object is in free fall, ____________________.
Answer:
Objects that are said to be undergoing free fall, are not encountering a significant force of air resistance; they are falling under the sole influence of gravity.
Explanation:
Under such conditions, all objects will fall with the same rate of acceleration, regardless of their mass.
A uniform metre rule of mass 10g is balanced on a knife edge placed at 45cm mark. Calculate the distance of a mass 25g from the pivot
Answer:
The distance of a mass 25g from the pivot is 18cm
Explanation:
Given
[tex]m_1 = 10g[/tex]
[tex]d_1 = 45cm[/tex]
[tex]m_2 = 25g[/tex]
Required
Distance of m2 from the pivot
To do this, we make use of:
[tex]m_1 * d_1 = m_2 * d_2[/tex] --- moments of the masses
So, we have:
[tex]10 * 45= 25* d_2[/tex]
[tex]450= 25* d_2[/tex]
Divide both sides by 25
[tex]18= d_2[/tex]
Hence:
[tex]d_2 = 18[/tex]
what does it mean to do science
Answer:
Doing science could be defined as carrying out scientific processes, like the scientific method, to add to science's body of knowledge.
0. The temperature of source is 500K with source energy 2003, what is the temperature of sink with sink energy 100 J? a. 500 K b. 300 K c. 250 K d. 125 K
Answer:
c. 250k
Explanation:
The temperature of the sink is approximately 250 K.
To find the temperature of the sink, we can use the formula for the efficiency of a heat engine:
Efficiency = 1 - (Temperature of Sink / Temperature of Source)
Given that the temperature of the source (T_source) is 500 K and the source energy (Q_source) is 2003 J, and the sink energy (Q_sink) is 100 J, we can rearrange the formula to solve for the temperature of the sink (T_sink):
Efficiency = (Q_source - Q_sink) / Q_source
Efficiency = (2003 J - 100 J) / 2003 J
Efficiency = 1903 J / 2003 J
Efficiency = 0.9497
Now, plug the efficiency back into the first equation to solve for T_sink:
0.9497 = 1 - (T_sink / 500 K)
T_sink / 500 K = 1 - 0.9497
T_sink / 500 K = 0.0503
Now, isolate T_sink:
T_sink = 0.0503 * 500 K
T_sink = 25.15 K
Since the temperature should be in Kelvin, we round down to the nearest whole number, which is 25 K. Thus, the temperature of the sink is approximately 250 K.
To learn more about sink energy, here
https://brainly.com/question/10483137
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Find the refractive index of a medium
having a velocity of 1.5 x 10^8*
Explanation:
refractive index ,is the ratio of velocity of light in vacuum to the velocity of light a medium
If you buy an amateur-sized reflecting telescope, say around 10 inches (25cm) aperture, it'll have something in it that sends the gathered starlight out the side of the telescope tube. What do we call this thing
Answer: objective lens
Explanation:
Light enters a refra
Light enters a telescope through a lens at the upper end, which focuses the light near the bottom of the telescope. An eyepiece then magnifies the image so that it can be viewed by the eye, or a detector like a photographic plate can be placed at the focus. The upper end of a reflecting telescope is open, and the light passes through to the mirror located at the bottom of the telescope. The mirror then focuses the light at the top end, where it can be detected. Alternatively, a second mirror may reflect the light to a position outside the telescope structure, where an observer can have easier access to it.
Convierta 8.5mW a cal/h (1 cal=4.186 j)
Answer:
[tex] = { \bf{2.03 \times {10}^{ - 6} }}[/tex]
g As they reach higher temperatures, most semiconductors... Selected Answer: have an increased resistance. Answers: have a constant resistance. have an increased resistance. have a decreased resistance.
Answer:
have an increased resistance
Magnets produce _________ in the spaces surrounding them
Answer:
magnetic field
Explanation:
A wheel rotates about a fixed axis with an initial angular velocity of 13 rad/s. During a 8-s interval the angular velocity increases to 57 rad/s. Assume that the angular acceleration was constant during this time interval. How many revolutions does the wheel turn through during this time interval
Answer:
The number of revolutions is 44.6.
Explanation:
We can find the revolutions of the wheel with the following equation:
[tex]\theta = \omega_{0}t + \frac{1}{2}\alpha t^{2}[/tex]
Where:
[tex]\omega_{0}[/tex]: is the initial angular velocity = 13 rad/s
t: is the time = 8 s
α: is the angular acceleration
We can find the angular acceleration with the initial and final angular velocities:
[tex] \omega_{f} = \omega_{0} + \alpha t [/tex]
Where:
[tex] \omega_{f} [/tex]: is the final angular velocity = 57 rad/s
[tex] \alpha = \frac{\omega_{f} - \omega_{0}}{t} = \frac{57 rad/s - 13 rad/s}{8 s} = 5.5 rad/s^{2} [/tex]
Hence, the number of revolutions is:
[tex] \theta = \omega_{0}t + \frac{1}{2}\alpha t^{2} = 13 rad/s*8 s + \frac{1}{2}*5.5 rad/s^{2}*(8 s)^{2} = 280 rad*\frac{1 rev}{2\pi rad} = 44.6 rev [/tex]
Therefore, the number of revolutions is 44.6.
I hope it helps you!
An electron has an initial speed of 8.06 x10^6 m/s in a uniform 5.60 x 10^5 N/C strength electic field.The field accelerates the electron in the direction opposite to its initial velocity.
(a) What is the direction of the electric field?
i. opposite
ii. direction to the electron's initial velocity
iii. same direction as the electron's initial velocity
iv. not enough information to decide
(b) How far does the electron travel before coming to rest? m
(c) How long does it take the electron to come to rest? s
(d) What is the electron's speed when it returns to its starting point?
Answer:
Explanation:
a)
The force on electron acts opposite to the velocity , and direction of force on electron is always opposite to direction of electric field .
Hence direction of electric field must be in the same in which electrons travels.
Hence option iii is correct.
b )
deceleration a = force / mass
= qE / m
= 1.6 x 10⁻¹⁶ x 5.6 x 10⁵ / 9.1 x 10⁻³¹
= .98 x 10²⁰ m /s²
v² = u² - 2 a s
0 = (8.06 x 10⁶ )² - 2 x .98 x 10²⁰ s
s = 64.96 x 10¹² / 1.96 x 10²⁰
= 33.14 x 10⁻⁸ m
c ) time required
= 8.06 x 10⁶ / .98 x 10²⁰
= 8.22 x 10⁻¹² s .
d ) Its speed will be same as that in the beginning ie 8.06 x 10⁶ m/s .
Answer:
(a) Option (i)
(b) 6.6 x 10^-4 m
(c) 8.2 x 10^-11 s
Explanation:
initial velocity, u = 8 .06 x 10^6 m/s
Electric field, E = 5.6 x 10^5 N/C
(a) The direction of field is opposite.
Option (i).
(b) Let the distance is s.
Use third equation of motion
[tex]v^2 = u^2 + 2 a s \\\\0 = u^2 - 2 \times \frac{qE}{m}\times s\\\\8.06\times 10^6\times 8.06\times 10^6 = \frac {1.6\times 10^{-19}\times 5.6\times 10^5}{9.1\times 10^{-31}} s\\\\s = 6.6\times 10^{-4} m[/tex]
(c) Let the time is t.
Use first equation of motion.
[tex]v = u + a t \\\\0 = u - \times \frac{qE}{m}\times t\\\\8.06\times 10^6 = \frac {1.6\times 10^{-19}\times 5.6\times 10^5}{9.1\times 10^{-31}} t\\\\t = 8.2\times 10^{-11} s[/tex]
A 2090-kg test rocket is launched vertically from the launch pad. Its fuel (of negligible mass) provides a thrust force so that its vertical velocity as a function of time is given by v(t) =At+Bt^2 , where A and B are constants and time is measured from the instant the fuel is ignited. The rocket has an upward acceleration of 1.50m/s 2 at the instant of ignition and, 1.00 s later, an upward velocity of 2.00 m/s. (a) Determine A and B , including their SI units. (b) At 4.00 s after fuel ignition, what is the acceleration of the rocket, and (c) what thrust force does the burning fuel exert on it, assuming no air resistance? Express the thrust in newtons and as a multiple of the rocket’s weight. (d) What was the initial thrust due to the fuel?
Answer:
a) A = 1.50 m / s², B = 1.33 m/s³, b) a = 12.1667 m / s²,
c) I = M (1.5 t + 1.333 t²) , d) ΔI = M 2.833 N
Explanation:
In this exercise give the expression for the speed of the rocket
v (t) = A t + B t²
and the initial conditions
a = 1.50 m / s² for t = 0 s
v = 2.00 m / s for t = 1.00 s
a) it is asked to determine the constants.
Let's look for acceleration with its definition
a = [tex]\frac{dv}{dt}[/tex]
a = A + 2B t
we apply the first condition t = 0 s
a = A
A = 1.50 m / s²
we apply the second condition t = 1.00 s
v = 1.5 1 + B 1²
2 = 1.5 + B
B = 2 / 1.5
B = 1.33 m/s³
the equation remains
v = 1.50 t + 1.333 t²
b) the acceleration for t = 4.00 s
a = 1.50 + 1.333 2t
a = 1.50 + 2.666 4
a = 12.1667 m / s²
c) The thrust
I = ∫ F dt = p_f - p₀
Newton's second law
F = M a
F = M (1.5 + 2 1.333 t) dt
we replace and integrate
I = M ∫ (1.5 + 2.666 t) dt
I = 1.5 t + 2.666 t²/2
I = M (1.5 t + 1.333 t²) + cte
in general the initial rockets with velocity v = 0 for t = 0, where we can calculate the constant
cte = 0
I = M (1.5 t + 1.333 t²)
d) the initial push
For this we must assume some small time interval, for example between
t = 0 s and t = 1 s
ΔI = I_f - I₀
ΔI = M (1.5 1 + 1.333 1²)
ΔI = M 2.833 N
Differentiate between Scalar quantity and Vector quantity and give two examples each
Monique walks 360 meters to get to lanier on days when she is early and doesn't get caught by traffic it takes her 60 seconds to get to school how fast was she running
Answer:
6m/s
Explanation:
We are to calculate the speed of Monique
Speed = Distance/Time
Given
Distance = 360m
Time = 60secs
Substitute
Speed = 360m/60s
Soeed = 6m/s
Hence she was running at 6m/s
A water-balloon launcher with mass 2 kg fires a 0.75 kg balloon with a
velocity of 14 m/s to the west. What is the recoil velocity of the launcher?
What is the answer
Answer:
5.25 m/s to the east
Explanation:
Applying,
MV = mv.............. Equation 1
Where M = mass of the launcher, V = recoil velocity of the launcher, m = mass of the balloon, v = velocity of the balloon
make V the subject of the equation
V = mv/M............ Equation 2
From the question,
M = 2 kg, m = 0.75 kg, v = 14 m/s
Substitute these values into equation 2
V = (0.75×14)/2
V = 5.25 m/s to the east
At which point is the kinetic energy of the pendulum the greatest?
C
A
D
B
Answer:
Point C
Explanation:
Greatest Kinetic Energy means lowest potential energy since energy is conserved. Lowest potential energy means lowest height which is at Point C.
Turning a corner at a typical large intersection in a city means driving your car through a circular arc with a radius of about 25 m. if the maximum advisable acceleration of your vehicle through a turn on wet pavement is 0.40 times the free-fall acceleration, what is the maximum speed at which you should drive through this turn?
Answer:
9.89 m/s.
Explanation:
Given that,
The radius of the circular arc, r = 25 m
The acceleration of the vehicle is 0.40 times the free-fall acceleration i.e.,a = 0.4(9.8) = 3.92 m/s²
Let v is the maximum speed at which you should drive through this turn. It can be solved as follows :
[tex]a=\dfrac{v^2}{r}\\\\v=\sqrt{ar} \\\\v=\sqrt{3.92\times 25} \\\\=9.89 m/s[/tex]
So, the maximum speed of the car should be 9.89 m/s.
Which of the following represents the velocity time relationship for a falling apple?
Answer "a" would be correct.
Answer:
d
Explanation:
There's an acceleration from gravity, thus the velocity is becoming faster and faster as it reaches the ground. Thus its D
Brainliest please~
When an apple falls towards the earth,the earth moves up to meet the apple. Is this true?If yes, why is the earth's motion not noticeable?
Answer:
Yes, when an apple falls towards the earth, the apple gets accelerated and comes down due to the gravitational force of attraction used by the earth. The apple also exerts an equal and opposite force on the earth but the earth does not move because the mass of the apple is very small, due to which the gravitational force produces a large acceleration in it (a = F/m) but the mass of the earth is very large, the same gravitational force produces very small acceleration in the earth and we don't see the earth rising towards the apple.
The velocity-time graph of a body is given. What quantities are represented by (a) slope of the graph and (b) area under the graph?
Answer:
a) acceleration
b) displacement
Explanation:
The velocity-time graph is a graph of velocity versus time. The velocity (m/s) would be on the Y-axis while time (s) would be on the X-axis.
a) The slope of a graph is given by: change in Y-axis/change in X-axis = ΔY/ΔX
In a velocity-time graph, ΔY = change in velocity and ΔX = change in time.
Hence, the slope of a velocity-time graph becomes: change in velocity/change in time.
Also, acceleration = change in velocity/change in time.
Hence, the slope of a velocity-time graph = acceleration.
b) Assuming that the area under a velocity-time graph is a rectangle, the area is given as:
Area of a rectangle = length x breadth
= velocity x time (m/s x s)
Also, displacement = velocity x time (m)
Hence, the area under a velocity-time graph of a body would give the displacement of the body.
David is driving a steady 30 m/s when he passes Tina, who is sitting in her car at rest. Tina begins to accelerate at a steady 2.0 m/s2 at the instant when David passes. How far does Tina drive before passing David?
A single-turn square loop of wire, 2.00 cm on each edge, carries a clockwise current of 0.240 A. The loop is inside a solenoid, with the plane of the loop perpendicular to the magnetic field of the solenoid. The solenoid has 30.0 turns/cm and carries a clockwise current of 15.0 A. Find:
a. the force on each side of the loop
b. the torque acting on the loop.
Answer:
Explanation:
a )
Magnetic field inside solenoid B = μ₀ NI ,
μ₀ = 4π x 10⁻⁷ ; N is no of turns per meter length in solenoid and I is current B= 4π x 10⁻⁷ x 30 x 10² x 15
= .0565 T .
Force on each side of square loop = B i L
B is external magnetic field , i is current in loop and L is length of side
Force on each side of square loop = .0565 x .24 x 2 x 10⁻²
= 2.7 x 10⁻⁴ N .
b )
Torque on the loop = F x d
F is force on one side , d is distance between two sides , that is side of the square loop
= 2.7 x 10⁻⁴ x 2 x 10⁻² N.m
= 5.4 x 10⁻⁶ N.m .
convert 2.4 milimetres into metre
Answer: 2.4 millimeters = 0.0024 meters
Explanation: A millimeter is 1/1000 of a meter. By diving 2.4 by 1000, you get 0.0024.
Find the magnitude and direction of a force between a 25.0 coulomb charge and a 40.0coulomb charge when they are separated by a distance of 30.0cm
Answer:
95.0 colomb
Explanation:
Make sure to understand the concept
A cat's displacement is 15 meters to the right in 7.0 seconds. If, at the start of the 7.0 seconds, the cat was moving at a velocity of 2.0 m/s left what was its final velocity?
Answer:
6.3 m/s
Explanation:
From the given information:
The displacement (x) = 15 m
time (t) = 7.0 s
initial velocity = -2.0 m/s (since it is moving in the opposite direction)
We need to determine the acceleration then find the final velocity.
By applying the kinematics equation:
[tex]x = ut + \dfrac{1}{2}at^2[/tex]
[tex]15 = (-2.0)(7.0) + \dfrac{1}{2}a(7.0)^2\\ \\ 15 = -14.0 + \dfrac{49}{2}a \\ \\ 29= 24.5a \\ \\ a= \dfrac{29}{24.5} \\ \\ a = 1.184 \ m/s^2[/tex]
Now, to determine the final velocity by using the equation:
v = u + at
v = -2 + 1.184(7.0)
v = 6.288 m/s
v ≅ 6.3 m/s
A body of mass 2kg is released from from a point 100m above the ground level. calculate kinetic energy 80m from the point of released.
Answer:
1568J
Explanation:
Since the problem states 80 m from the point of drop, the height relative to the ground will be 100-80=20m.
Use conservation of Energy
ΔUg+ΔKE=0
ΔUg= mgΔh=2*9.8*(20-100)=-1568J
ΔKE-1568J=0
ΔKE=1568J
since KEi= 0 since the object is at rest 100m up, the kinetic energy 20meters above the ground is 1568J