Answer:
A
Explanation:
the answer would be basicly A
A 1 800-kg pile driver is used to drive a steel I-beam into the ground. The pile driver falls 4.60 m before coming into contact with the top of the beam, and it drives the beam 13.6 cm farther into the ground before coming to rest. Using energy considerations, calculate the average force the beam exerts on the pile driver while the pile driver is brought to rest.
Answer:
F = 614913.88 N
Explanation:
We are given;
Mass of pile driver; m = 1800 kg
Height of fall of pole driver; h = 4.6 m
Depth driven into beam; d = 13.6 cm = 0.136 m
Now, from energy equations and applying to this question, we can write that;
Workdone = Change in potential energy
Formula for workdone is; W = F × d
While the average potential energy here is; W = mg(h + d)
Thus;
Fd = mg(h + d)
Where F is the average force exerted by the beam on the pile driver while in bringing it to rest.
Making F the subject, we have;
F = mg(h + d)/d
F = 1800 × 9.81 × (4.6 + 0.136)/0.136
F = 614913.88 N
Starting from the front door of your ranch house, you walk 55.0 m due east to your windmill, turn around, and then slowly walk 35.0 m west to a bench, where you sit and watch the sunrise. It takes you 30.0 s to walk from your house to the windmill and then 36.0 s to walk from the windmill to the bench.
Required:
a. For the entire trip from your front door to the bench, what is your average velocity?
b. For the entire trip from your front door to the bench, what is your average speed?
Answer:
Explanation:
Average velocity = Total displacement / total time
Average speed = total distance covered / total time
a )
For the entire trip from your front door to the bench
Total displacement = 55 - 35 = 20 m [ first displacement is positive and second displacement is negative , because second displacement is in opposite direction ]
Total displacement = 20 m
Total time = 30 + 36 = 66 s
Average velocity = 20 / 66
= .303 m / s
b )
For the entire trip from your front door to the bench
Total distance covered = 55 + 35 = 90 m
Total time = 30 + 36 = 66 s
Average speed = 90 / 66
= 1.36 m / s
Two 800 cm^3 containers hold identical amounts of a monatomic gas at 20°C. Container A is rigid. Container B has a 100 cm^2 piston with a mass of 10 kg that can slide up and down vertically without friction. Both containers are placed on identical heaters and heated for equal amounts of time.
Required:
a. Will the final temperature of the gas in A be greater, less than, or equal to the temperature in B?
b. Show both processes on a single PV diagram.
c. What are the initial pressures in containers A and B?
d. Suppose the heaters have 25 W of power and are turned on for 15s. What is the final volume of container B?
Answer:
1) Final Temperature of the gas in A will be GREATER than the temperature in B
2) Diagram of both processes on a single PV has been uploaded below
3) The Initial pressures in containers A and B is 3039.87 J/liters
4) the final volume of container B is 923.36 cm³
Explanation:
Given that;
Temperature = 20°C = 293 K
mass of piston = 10 kg
Area = 100cm³
Volume V = 800 cm³ = 0.8 L
ideal gas constant R = 8.3 J/K·mol
1)
Final Temperature of the gas in A will b GREATER than the temperature in B
2)
Diagram of both processes on a single PV has been uploaded below,
3)
Initial pressures in containers A and B
PV = nRT
P = RT/V
we substitute
P = (8.3 × 293) / 0.8
P = 2431.9 / 0.8
P = 3039.87 J/liters
Therefore, The Initial pressures in containers A and B is 3039.87 J/liters
4)
Given that;
power = 25 W
time t = 15s
the final volume of container B = ?
we know that;
work done = power × time
work done = 25 × 15 = 375
Also work done = P( V₂ - V₁ )
so we substitute
375 = 3039.87 ( V₂ - 0.8 )
( V₂ - 0.8 ) = 375 / 3039.87
V₂ - 0.8 = 0.12336
V₂ = 0.12336 + 0.8
V₂ = 0.92336 Litres
V₂ = 923.36 cm³
Therefore, the final volume of container B is 923.36 cm³
At what height does a 3500-kg truck have a potential energy of 90,000 J gravitational potential energy relative to the ground?
Answer:
MGH=energy
3500*9.8*h=90000
h=90000/34300
h=2.62m
a device that spreads light into different wavelengths is a what?
maybe a spectrograph ?
What is the value of the angle of inclination of the slide?
Answer:
63°
that's my answer
but then I am sorry if I'm wrong
Explanation:
90-27 = 63°
A 28.8 kg child sits on a 6.0 m long teeter-totter at a point 1.5 m from the pivot point (at the center of the teeter-totter). On the other side of the pivot point, an adult pushes straight down on the teeter-totter with a force of 180 N. Determine the direction the teeter-totter will rotate if the adult applies the force at a distance of each of the following from the pivot. (Assume the teeter-totter is horizontal when the adult applies the force and that the child's weight applies a clockwise torque.)
a.
1. 1.0 m
2. counterclockwise
b.
1. 2.0 m
2. clockwise
3. counterclockwise
c.
1. 3.0m
2. clockwise
3. counterclockwise
Answer:
case A) tau_net = -243.36 N m, case B) tau_net = 783.36 N / m, tau_net = -63.36 N m, case C) tau _net = - 963.36 N m,
Explanation:
For this exercise we use Newton's relation for rotation
Σ τ = I α
In this exercise the mass of the child is m = 28.8, assuming x = 1.5 m, the force applied by the man is F = 180N
we will assume that the counterclockwise turns are positive.
case a
tau_net = m g x - F x2
tau_nett = -28.8 9.8 1.5 + 180 1
tau_net = -243.36 N m
in this case the man's force is downward and the system rotates clockwise
case b
2 force clockwise, the direction of
the force is up
tau_nett = -28.8 9.8 1.5 - 180 2
tau_net = 783.36 N / m
in case the force is applied upwards
3) counterclockwise
tau_nett = -28.8 9.8 1.5 + 180 2
tau_net = -63.36 N m
system rotates clockwise
case c
2 schedule
tau_nett = -28.8 9.8 1.5 - 180 3
tau _net = - 963.36 N m
3 counterclockwise
tau_nett = -28.8 9.8 1.5 + 180 3
tau_net = 116.64 Nm
the sitam rotated counterclockwise
How old do you need to be in order to qualify to be a U.S. Senator
Answer: 30 Years Old
Explanation: The constitution has around three qualifications for service in the U.S. Senate, Your age must be at least 30 years.
Which statement BEST explains why a bouncing basketball will not remain in motion forever?
Group of answer choices
The energy is transferred to sound and heat energy.
The energy is used up and destroyed.
The energy is transferred to light and potential energy.
The energy is transferred to chemical and heat energy.
Answer:
The energy is transferred to chemical and heat energy.
Explanation:
If you define "bouncing" as leaving the ground for any amount of time, the ball stops bouncing when the elastic energy stored in the compression phase of the bounce is not enough to overcome the weight of the ball. This is the proof of the answer i Hope this helps :)
Help me !!!
What is the velocity of a ball with
a momentum of -4.5 kg*m/s and a
mass of 0.45 kg?
Answer:−4.05
Explanation:
If the gravitational constant is extremely weak, how is the force of gravity on earth so strong?
A 45945990 prism is immersed in water. A ray of light is incident normally on one of its shorter faces. What is the minimum index of refraction that the prism must have if this ray is to be totally reflected within the glass at the long face of the prism
Answer:
Explanation:
Angle of incidence at the longer face = 45⁰ ( see the figure in the attached file )
For total reflection from longer face
i = C where C is critical angle .
And relation between critical angle and refractive index is as follows .
μ = 1 / sinC
= 1 / sin45
= √2
= 1.414 .
pls help everything is in the pic
Answer:
c
Explanation:
please help!!!
When a switch is turned from the off to the on position, it is changing the circuit in which of the following ways? O An open circuit is being changed into a closed circuit. A closed circuit is being changed into an open circuit. O A parallel circuit is being changed into a series circuit. A series circuit is being changed into a parallel circuit.
Answer:
i Believe the correct answer is "An open circuit being changed into a closed circuit"
Explanation:
Two students, each riding bicycles, start from the same apartment building and ride to the same building on campus, but each takes a different route. The first student rides 1300 m due east and then turns due north and travels another 1430 m before arriving at the destination. The second student heads due north for 1930 m and then turns and heads directly toward the destination.
(a) At the turning point, how far is the second student from the destination? ....m
(b) During the last leg of the trip, what direction (measured relative to due east) must the second student head? (Give your answer as a positive number from 0 to 180 degrees, either north or south of due east.) .... degrees south of east
Answer:
a) d= 1393 m
b) θ= 21º S of E.
Explanation:
a)
Since the second student goes due north, and the first student goes due east along 1300m till he turns directly northward, we conclude that when the second student turns, he is at 1300m west from the destination.Since he rode 1930 m due north, we can conclude also that the second student is 500 m past the destination in the north direction.So we can find the distance from the destination at the turning point, using the Pythagorean Theorem, taking the right triangle defined by the 1300 m segment due east, the 500 m segment due south, and which hypotenuse is the distance straight to the destination, as follows:[tex]d = \sqrt{(1300m)^{2} + (500m)^{2} } = 1393 m (1)[/tex]
b)
Taking the same right triangle than in (a), we can find the angle that makes the vector along the direction taken by the second student with the due east, applying the definition of tangent of an angle, as follows:[tex]tg \theta = \frac{500m}{1300m} = 0.385 (2)[/tex]
⇒ θ= tg⁻¹ (0.385) = 21º S of E.
Ropes 3 m and 5 m in length are fastened to a holiday decoration that is suspended over a town square. The decoration has a mass of 3 kg. The ropes, fastened at different heights, make angles of 52° and 40° with the horizontal. Find the tension in each wire and the magnitude of each tension. (Use g = 9.8 m/s2 for the acceleration due to gravity. Round your answers to two decimal places.)
Answer:
Explanation:
Let the tension in ropes be T₁ and T₂ . Ropes are making angle of 52 and 40 degree with the horizontal . The vertical component of tension will add up together to balance the weight of the decoration
T₁ sin52 + T₂ sin40 = 3 x 9.8
.788 T₁ + .643 T₂ = 29.4
The horizontal component of tension will add up to zero because the decoration piece is at rest .
T₁ cos52 + T₂ cos40 = 0
.615 T₁ - .766 T₂ = 0
T₁ = 1.24 T₂
Substituting this value of T₁ in earlier equation , we have
.788 x 1.24 T₂ + .643 T₂ = 29.4
1.62 T₂ = 29.4
T₂ = 18.15 N
T₁ = 1.24 x 18.15 = 22.51 N .
An air-filled capacitor consists of two parallel plates, each with an area of A , separated by a distance d . A V potential difference is applied to these plates. What is the magnitude of the electric field between the plates
Answer:
E = V / d
Explanation:
In a charged capacitor an electric field is established that goes from the positive to the negative plate, this field is constant,
the potential difference is
D = E d
in this case they do not give the difference in potential V and the distance between the plates d
E = V / d
What is the car's acceleration from 0 to 1 second?
A. 8 mph/s
B. 20 mph/s
C. 60 mph/s
D. 10 mph/s
Acceleration figures for cars usually are given as the number of seconds needed to go from 0.0 to 97 km/h. Convert 97 km/h into m/s.
Answer:
26.9444m/s
pls brainliest
A river flows at 2m/s the velociy of ferry relative to the shore is 4m/s
Answer:
Explanation:
.....
A Typical operating voltage of an electron microscope is 50 kV. A Typical experimental operating voltage range of a Scanning electron microscope is 1kV to 30kV. Higher voltages can penetrate and causes deformation on the sample. Lets assume it operates at 10kV. (i)What is the smallest distance that it could possibly resolve
Answer:
y =[tex]\frac{1.22L}{D}[/tex] [tex]\sqrt{\frac{h^2 m}{2eV} }[/tex]
Explanation:
Let's solve this exercise in parts. Let's start by finding the wavelength of the electrons accelerated to v = 10 103 V, let's use the DeBroglie relation
λ= [tex]\frac{h}{p} = \frac{h}{mv}[/tex]
Let's use conservation of energy for speed
starting point
Em₀ = U = e V
final point
Em_f = K = ½ m v²
Em₀ = Em_f
eV = ½ m v²
v =[tex]\sqrt{\frac{2eV}{m} }[/tex]
we substitute
λ= [tex]\sqrt{ \frac{h^2 m}{2eV}}[/tex]
the diffraction phenomenon determines the minimum resolution, for this we find the first zero of the spectrum
a sin θ = m λ
first zero occurs at m = 1, also these experiments are performed at very small angles
sin θ = θ
θ = λ / a
This expression is valid for linear slits, in the microscope the slits are circular, when solving the polar coordinates we obtain
θ = 1.22 λ / D
where D is the diameter of the opening
we substitute
θ = [tex]\frac{1.22}{D}[/tex] \sqrt{ \frac{h^2 m}{2eV}}
this is the minimum angle that can be seen, if the distance is desired suppose that the distance of the microscope is L, as the angles are measured in radians
θ = y / L
when substituting
where y is the minimum distance that can be resolved for this acceleration voltage
y =[tex]\frac{1.22L}{D}[/tex] [tex]\sqrt{\frac{h^2 m}{2eV} }[/tex]
A monk is sitting atop a mountain in complete rest in meditation. What is the kinetic Energy of the monk? (assume mass of 65 kg and the mountain's height was 1000 m)
Answer:
no kinetic energy
hope this helps! :-D
Explanation:
the monk is not moving
The earth has a vertical electric field at the surface, pointing down, that averages 100 N/C. This field is maintained by various atmospheric processes, including lightning. If research came out on Planet x in a distant solar system that had a electric field with strength 222 N/C and 0.6 the radius of the earth, what would be the excess charge on planet x
Answer:
q = 3.6 10⁵ C
Explanation:
To solve this exercise, let's use one of the consequences of Gauss's law, that all the charge on a body can be considered at its center, therefore we calculate the electric field on the surface of a sphere with the radius of the Earth
r = 6 , 37 106 m
E = k q / r²
q = E r² / k
q = [tex]\frac{100 \ (6.37 \ 10^6)^2}{9 \ 10^9}[/tex]
q = 4.5 10⁵ C
Now let's calculate the charge on the planet with E = 222 N / c and radius
r = 0.6 r_ Earth
r = 0.6 6.37 10⁶ = 3.822 10⁶ m
E = k q / r²
q = E r² / k
q = [tex]\frac{222 (3.822 \ 10^6)^2}{ 9 \ 10^9}[/tex]
q = 3.6 10⁵ C
Which would you choose to keep rods or cones? And why?
What must the charge (sign and magnitude) of a particle of mass 1.43 g be for it to remain stationary when placed in a downward-directed electric field of magnitude 700 N/C ? Use 9.80 m/s2 for the magnitude of the free-fall acceleration.
Answer:
the sign and magnitude of the charge is - 2 x 10⁻⁵ C.
Explanation:
Given;
mass of the particle, m = 1.43 g = 0.00143 kg
electric field experienced by the particle, E = 700 N/C
The force experienced by the particle is calculated as;
F = mg = EQ
Where;
Q is the magnitude of the charge
[tex]Q = \frac{mg}{E} \\\\Q = \frac{0.00143 \times 9.8}{700} \\\\Q = 2\times 10^{-5} \ C[/tex]
The force must be upward in opposite direction to the electric field. Since the force and the electric field are in opposite direction, the charge must be negative.
Therefore, the sign and magnitude of the charge is - 2 x 10⁻⁵ C.
The particle to remain stationary, when placed in a downward-directed electric the force must be in opposite direction which upward directed.
The charge of the given particle to remain stationary should be [tex]-2\times10^{-5}[/tex] C.
What is electric charge?The electric force experienced by the body when placed it into the electromagnetic field is called electric charge.
Given information-
The mass of the particle is 1.43 g or 0.00143 kg.
The magnitude of the downward-directed electric field is 700 N/C.
The magnitude of the free-fall acceleration is 9.80 meter per second squared.
The electric field is defined as the electric force per unit charge. It can be given as,
[tex]E=\dfrac{F}{q}[/tex]
Rewrite the equation for the charge,
[tex]q=\dfrac{F}{E}[/tex]
Force experienced by the particle is equal to the product of mass and free fall acceleration (gravity). Thus,
[tex]q=\dfrac{0.00143\times9.8}{700}\\q=2\times10^{-5}[/tex]
Thus the magnitude of the charge is [tex]2\times10^{-5}[/tex] C.
The particle to remain stationary, when placed in a downward-directed electric the force must be in opposite direction which upward directed. For the opposite direction the sign of the charge should be negative.
Thus the charge of the given particle to remain stationary should be [tex]-2\times10^{-5}[/tex] C.
Learn more about the electric charge here;
https://brainly.com/question/14372859
What is the shortest time that a jet pilot starting from rest can take to reach Mach-3.60 (3.60 times the speed of sound) without graying out? (Use 331 m/s for the speed of sound in cold air.)
Answer:
30.4 s
Explanation:
A pilot , with plane accelerated at 4 g starts greying out . In the problem , the acceleration of jet is 4 g
a = 4 x 9.8 = 39.2 m /s²
initial velocity u = 0
Final velocity = 3.60 times speed of sound
= 3.6 x 331 = 1191.6 m /s
v = u + at
Putting the values
1191.6 = 0 + 39.2 t
t = 30.4 s .
I need help will mark brainliest
Answer: ITS 1 TRUST ME MAN BYE K
Explanation: OK BYE TRUST YEAH
Beams of high-speed protons can be produced in "guns" using electric fields to accelerate the protons. (a) What acceleration would a proton experience if the gun's electric field were 2.95 × 104 N/C? (b) What speed would the proton attain if the field accelerated the proton through a distance of 1.26 cm?
Answer:
(A) the acceleration experienced by the proton 2.821 x 10¹² m/s²
(B) the speed of the proton is 2.67 x 10⁵ m/s
Explanation:
Given;
electric field experienced by the proton, E = 2.95 x 10⁴ N/C
charge of proton, Q = 1.6 x 10⁻¹⁹ C
mass of proton, m = 1.673 x 10⁻²⁷ kg
distance moved by the proton, d = 1.26 cm = 0.0126 m
(a)
The force experienced by the proton is calculated as;
F = ma = EQ
where;
a is the acceleration experienced by the proton
[tex]a = \frac{EQ}{m} \\\\a = \frac{2.95\times 10^4 \ \times \ 1.6\times 10^{-19}}{1.673 \times 10^{-27}} \\\\a = 2.821 \times 10^{12} \ m/s^2[/tex]
(b) the speed of the proton is calculated;
v² = u² + 2ad
v² = 0 + (2 x 2.821 x 10¹² x 0.0126)
v² = 7.109 x 10¹⁰
v = √7.109 x 10¹⁰
v = 2.67 x 10⁵ m/s
a body accelerates uniformly from rest at 2m/s^2 for 5 seconds. Calculate its averege velocity in this time
HERE IS YOUR ANSWER!
Explain what is happening in this picture
Answer:
in this video waves are coming up for the BOTTOM to the top of the sandbar