Answer:
The first part is right (KE is conserved in an elastic collision).
The second part of the statement is false,.
Since momentum is conserved, let moving mass m strike stationary mass M:
m v = (m + M) V where m v is the momentum in
Obviously, v does not equal V.
What causes coastal erosion
La erosión costera es la pérdida o desplazamiento de tierra, o la remoción a largo plazo de sedimentos y rocas a lo largo de la costa debido a la acción de olas, corrientes, mareas, agua impulsada por el viento, hielo transportado por el agua u otros impactos de marejadas ciclónicas.
1. A person kicks a rock off a cliff horizontally with a speed of 20 m/s. It takes 7.0 seconds to hit the
ground, find:
a. height of the cliff
b. final vertical velocity
C. range
D.speed and angle of impact
This problem involved half projectile.
initial velocity, vo = 20 m/s
time of flight, t = 7 s
(a) Simply use the formula to get the height, h:
h = vo*t - (1/2)gt^2
(b) To get the final vertical velocity or terminal velocity (vf), use the formula:
(vf)^2 - (vo)^2 = 2gh
(c) Use the formula find the horizontal distance traveled, R:
R = vo * cos(θ) * t
But since the angle involved with respect to horizontal is zero, and cos(0) = 1, we have
R = vo * t
Hope this helps~ `u`
Jai
A vessel having a capacity of 0.05 m³ contains a mixture of saturated water an saturated steam at a temperature 245°C the mass of the liquid present is 10 kg. find the following: i- The pressure. ii- The mass. iii- The specific volume. iv- The specific enthalpy. v- The specific internal energy.
A mountain climber, in the process of crossing between two cliffs by a rope, pauses to rest. She weighs 520 N. As the drawing shows, she is closer to the left cliff than to the right cliff, with the result that the tensions in the left and right sides of the rope are not the same. Find the tensions in the rope to the left and to the right of the mountain climber.
Answer:
The answer is "892.90 N"
Explanation:
Following are the solution to these question:
Calculating the vertical force of the summation that is equal to zero:
[tex]\to TL \cos 65 + TR \cos 80 -520 = 0\\\\\to 0.4226\ TL + 0.1736\ TR = 520\\[/tex]
Calculating the sum of horizontal forces that is equal to zero:
[tex]\to TL\sin 65 - TR \sin 80 = 0 \\\\\to 0.9063TL - 0.9846TR = 0\\\\\to TL = (\frac{0.9846}{0.9063})\ TR \ \ = 1.0866\ TR\\\\\to 0.4226(1.0866) \ TR +0.1736\ TR =520 \ N\\\\\to 0.6328 \ TR = 520 \\\\\to TR = 821.74 \ N \\\\\to TL = 1.0866 \times 821.74 = 892.90\ N[/tex]
An ice cube in a glass of water is pushed to the bottom of the glass and held there with a straw. Consequently, the buoyant force on the ice cube is now a. the same as when the cube was floating at the top. b. exactly balanced by the weight of the ice cube. c. exactly balanced by the force exerted by the straw. d. greater than when the cube was floating at the top.
Answer:d
Explanation:
Given
Initially, the ice cube is floating over the water
When the cube is pressed to touch the bottom, it is submerged fully
Therefore more buoyant force is acting on it
At first, a part of the volume is submerged in the water, so the buoyant force is less, but as the entire cube is immersed in the water, the buoyant force increases.
In medieval warfare, one of the greatest technological advancement was the trebuchet. The trebuchet was used to sling rocks into castles. You are asked to study the motion of such a projectile for a group of local enthusiast planning a medieval war reenactment. Unfortunately an actual trebuchet had not been built yet, so you decide to first look at the motion of a thrown ball as a model of rocks thrown by a trebuchet. Specifically, you are interested in how the horizontal and the vertical components of the velocity for a thrown object change with time. 1. Make a large rough sketch of the trajectory of the ball after it has been thrown. Draw the ball in at least five different positions; two when the ball is going up, two when it is going down, and one at its maximum height. Label the horizontal and vertical axes of your coordinate system.
2. On the sketch, draw and label the expected acceleration vectors of the ball (relative sizes and directions) for the five different positions. Decompose each acceleration vector into its vertical and horizontal components.
3. On the sketch, draw and label the velocity vectors of the object at the same positions you chose to draw your acceleration vectors. Decomposes each velocity vector into its vertical and horizontal components. Check to see that the changes in the velocity vector are consistent with the acceleration vectors.
4. Looking at the sketch, how does someone expect the ball's horizontal acceleration to change with time? Could you give a possible equation giving the ball's horizontal acceleration as a function of time? Graph this equation. If there are constants in your equation, what kinematic quantities do they represent? How would someone determine these constants from the graph?
5. Looking at the sketch, how does someone expect the ball's horizontal velocity to change with time? Is it consistent with the statements about the ball's acceleration from the previous question? Could you give a possible equation for the ball's horizontal velocity as a function of time? Graph this equation. If there are constants in the equation, what kinematic quantities do they represent? How would someone determine these constants from the graph?
6. Could you give a possible equation for the ball's horizontal position as a function of time? Graph this equation. If there are constants in the equation, what kinematic quantities do they represent? How would someone determine these constants from the graph? Are any of these constants related to the equations for horizontal velocity or acceleration?
7. Repeat questions 4-6 for the vertical component of the acceleration, velocity, and position. How are the constants for the acceleration, velocity and position equations related?
Answer:
2) a_y= -g 3) vₓ=constant v_y = v_{oy} - g t, 4) vₓ = v₀ₓ - ax t
5) changes the horizontal speed, should change range
7) changes the vertical speed change the maximum height
Explanation:
1) After reading your long writing, we are going to solve the exercise, in the attachment you can see the different vectors.
2) The acceleration vectors are vertical and directed downwards due to the attraction of the Earth (gravity force) this force is constant, on the x axis there is no acceleration
3) the velocity vectors on the x-axis are constant because there are no relationships and the y-axis changes value according to the expression
v_y = v_{oy} - gt
at the point of maximum height, vy = 0 is equal to the maximum height
4) For someone to change the horizontal acceleration we must assume a friction with the air, in this case they relate it would be in the opposite direction to the horizontal speed
In the graph it would be directed to the left, therefore the velocity would be
vₓ = v₀ₓ - ax t
5 and 6) If someone changes the horizontal speed, they should change the range of the shot for greater horizontal speed, the rock goes further.
the equations of motion are
x = v₀ₓ t
y = v_{oy} t - ½ g t²
7) If someone changes the vertical speed change the maximum height, but not the scope of the shot, for higher speed higher maximum height,
the equations of motion are the same.
I need help with science o.o:
Question 1:
An egg yolk is unicellular.
True
False
___________________________
Question 2:
Your body has more than a billion cells.
True
False
_____________________
Question 3:
Almost all cells are not microscopic.
True
False
please dont steal my points :>
Answer:
TrueTrueFalseExplanation:
this is the answer
Answer:
1.true
2true
3.false
Explanation:
espero que te ayude
Surface tension is often calculated using a machine that lifts a wire ring from the surface of a liquid. In this case the ring and liquid have some cohesive forces and attract rather than repel. In order to lift a ring of radius 2.75 cm off of the surface of a pool of blood plasma, a vertical force of 2.00*10-2 N greater than the weight of the ring is required. Consider the situation just before the ring breaks contact with the blood plasma where the blood plasma makes a contact angle of approximately zero degrees along the circumference of the ring and is stretched down vertically on both sides of the ring.
Required:
Calculate the surface tension of blood plasma from this information.
Answer:
0.116 N/m
Explanation:
Since the net force acting on the ring must be greater than 2.00 × 10⁻² N, and the surface tension T = F/L where F = net force = 2.00 × 10⁻² N and L = circumference of ring = 2πr where r = radius of ring = 2.75 cm = 2.75 × 10⁻² m.
So, T = F/L
= F/2πr
= 2.00 × 10⁻² N ÷ 2π(2.75 × 10⁻² m)
= 1/2.75π N/m
= 1/8.64 N/m
= 0.116 N/m
how is a trench and a tsunami related? 6-8 sentences
Answer: A tsunami is a very long-wavelength wave of water that is generated by sudden displacement of the seafloor or disruption of any body of standing water. Tsunami are sometimes called "seismic sea waves", although they can be generated by mechanisms other than earthquakes. Tsunami have also been called "tidal waves", but this term should not be used because they are not in any way related to the tides of the Earth. Because tsunami occur suddenly, often without warning, they are extremely dangerous to coastal communities. Ocean trenches are steep depressions in the deepest parts of the ocean [where old ocean crust from one tectonic plate is pushed beneath another plate, raising mountains, causing earthquakes, and forming volcanoes on the seafloor and on land.
Explanation:
A 3.0-kg and a 1.0-kg box rest side-by-side on a smooth, level floor. A horizontal force of 32 N is applied to the 1.0-kg box pushing it against the 3.0-kg box, and, as a result, both boxes slide along the floor. How hard do the two boxes push against each other
Considering both boxes as one body, it would have a total mass of 4.0 kg. By Newton's second law, the 32 N force applies an acceleration a such that
∑ F = 32 N = (4.0 kg) a → a = 8.0 m/s²
and both boxes share this acceleration. (There is no friction, so the given force is the only one involved in the direction of the boxes' motion.)
Now consider just the smaller box. It is feeling the effect of the 32 N push in one direction and, as it comes into contact with the larger box, a normal force that points in the opposite direction. Let n be the magnitude of this normal force; this is what you want to find. By Newton's second law,
∑ F = 32 N - n = (1.0 kg) (8.0 m/s²)
n = 32 N - 8.0 N
n = 24 N
Just to make sure that this is consistent: by Newton's third law, the larger box feels the same force but pointing in the opposite direction. On the smaller box, n opposes the pushing force, so points backward. So from the larger box's perspective, n acts on it in the forward direction. This is the only force acting on the larger box, so Newton's second law gives
∑ F = 24 N = (3.0 kg) (8.0 m/s²)
1. An electron travels 4.82 meters in 0.00360 seconds. What is its average speed?
Answer:
speed =distance /time
speed =4.82/0.00360
speed =1338.8m/s
What happens after the president gives the budget to Congress?
Answer: The president submits a budget to Congress by the first Monday in February every year. The budget contains estimates of federal government income and spending for the upcoming fiscal year and also recommends funding levels for the federal government.
Explanation:
Answer: The president submits a budget to Congress by the first Monday in February every year. The budget contains estimates of federal government income and spending for the upcoming fiscal year and also recommends funding levels for the federal government.
Your welcome!! :)
A graduated beaker with 375 mL of water is sitting on a scale which measures the weight of the glass and water to be 7.60 N. When a rock is put into the glass, the volume level of the water changes to 450 mL and the scale reading changes to 9.22 N. What is the specific gravity of the rock
Answer:
Volume of water displaced = 450 - 375 = 75 ml
Vr = volume of rock = 75 ml
Wr = 9.22 - 7.60 = 1.62 N weight of 75 ml of rock
Density of rock = 1.62 N / 75 ml = .0216 N / ml
Density of water = 1000 g / 1000 ml = 9.8 N / 1000 ml = .0098 N / ml
Density of rock / density of water = .0216 / .0098 = 2.20
The specific gravity of the rock in the given water volume is 0.2.
The given parameters;
initial volume of the water, = 375 mlweight of the water, = 7.6 Nfinal volume of water = 450 mlchange in scale reading = 9.22 NThe specific gravity of the rock is calculated as follows;
[tex]S.G = \frac{weight \ in \ air}{Weight \ in \ water} \\\\S.G = \frac{450 - 375}{375} \\\\S.G = 0.2[/tex]
Thus, the specific gravity of the rock in the given water volume is 0.2.
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A 10 kg box initially at rest is pulled with a 50 N horizontal force for 4 m across a level surface. The force of friction acting on the box is a constant 20 N. How much work is done by the normal force pushing up on the box from the ground?
A. 10 J
B. 0 J
C. 100 J
D. 50 J
Answer: 0 j
Explanation:
It is given that,
Mass of the box, m = 10 kg
Force with which the box is pulled, F = 50 N
It is moved a distance of 4 m
Force of friction acting on the box, f = 20 N
We need to find the initial kinetic energy the box have. It is clear that the box is at rest initially. As there is no motion in the box at that time. The formula for the kinetic energy of the box is given by :
As v = 0
So, the initial kinetic energy of the box is 0. Hence, this is the required solution.
The diagram below shows the beaks of five species of birds that developed over time from
one parent species. The five species of birds can be found living in the different areas. Which
of the following BEST explains why the beak shape of each species of bird developed
differently? * 5
(1 Point)
A. Birds in different areas were able to make different birdcalls and songs.
O
B. Birds in different areas were exposed to different food sources.
C. Birds in different areas had different materials to make nests.
o o
D. Birds in different areas had different predators to defend or hide from.
Answer:
Birds in different areas were exposed to different food sources.
Explanation:Im almost 100 percent this is it.
Answer:
the answer is B
Explanation:
i did test on preformance
Check out this app! It's millions of students helping each other get through their schoolwork. https://brainly.app.link/qpzV02MawO
Answer:
OK we appreciate your concern.
Which sentence accurately uses the homophones “they’re,” “there,” or “their”?
Many of the students left there backpacks on the bus.
They’re going to come home as soon as the movie is over.
I think I left the bags of groceries on the floor over their.
These dogs bark at everyone, but there not dangerous at all.
Answer:
They're going to come home as soon as the movie is over.
Answer:
B: They're going to come home as soon as the movie is over.
Explanation:
Suppose a rocket in space is accelerating at 1.5 m/s2. If, at a later time, the rocket quadruples its thrust (i.e., net propelling force), what is the new acceleration?
our battery has died and your friends push your vehicle so you can kick-start the engine. You and the vehicle have a combined mass of 1600 kg. If your friends do 6000 J of work and one-third of that is dissipated by friction, how fast is your vehicle traveling?
Answer:2.23 m/s
Explanation:
Given
Mass of person and vehicle is [tex]m=1600\ kg[/tex]
Total work done is [tex]W_t=6000\ J[/tex]
Friction consumes one-third of the energy
The remaining two-third is consumed to increase the kinetic energy
[tex]\Rightarrow \dfrac{2}{3}\times 6000=\dfrac{1}{2}\times 1600\times v^2\\\\\Rightarrow 4000\times 2=1600\times v^2\\\\\Rightarrow v=\sqrt{5}\ \approx 2.23\ m/s[/tex]
The plates of a vacuum-gap parallel plate capacitor have a 100.0 mm2 area, a vacuum gap of 5.00 mm and are connected to a 1.5-volt battery. After the capacitor is charged, the battery is disconnected from the capacitor. After the battery is disconnected, the plates are pulled apart until the vacuum gap is 7.50 mm. a. What are the initial and final energies stored in the capacitor
Answer:
E₀ = 2.0*10⁻¹¹ J = 0.2 pJ
Ef = 3.0*10⁻¹¹ J = 0.3 pJ
Explanation:
The energy stored between the plates of a parallel plate capacitor can be expressed in terms of the capacitance C and the potential difference between plates V as follows:[tex]E = \frac{1}{2} * C * V^{2} (1)[/tex]
When the capacitor is fully charged, the potential difference between plates must be equal to the voltage of the battery, 1.5 V.In a parallel plate capacitor, the value of the capacitance is independent of the applied voltage, and depends only on geometric constants and the dielectric constant of the medium between plates, as follows:[tex]C = \frac{\epsilon_{o}*A}{d} (2)[/tex]
We can find the initial value of C replacing in (2) by the givens below:A = 100.0 mm2d= 5.00 mmε₀ = 8.85*10⁻¹² F/m[tex]C_{o} = \frac{\epsilon_{o}*A}{d} = \frac{(8.85*(10)^{-12} F/m)*(10^{-4} m2)}{5.0*(10)^{-3}m} = 1.77*10^{-13} F (3)[/tex]With this value of C₀, and the value of the initial potential difference between plates (1.5 V), we can find the initial charge on the capacitor, starting from the definition of capacitance:[tex]C =\frac{Q}{V} (4)[/tex]Solving for Q in (4):[tex]Q = C_{o}* V = 1.77*10^{-13} F * 1.5 V = 2.65*10^{-13} C (5)[/tex]Finally, we can find the initial energy stored in the capacitor, replacing (3) and V in (1):[tex]E_{o} = \frac{1}{2} * C_{o} * V_{o} ^{2} = \frac{1}{2} * 1.77*10^{-13}F*(1.5V)^{2} = 0.2 pJ (6)[/tex]
If we pull apart the plates until the vacuum gap is 7.50 mm, we will change the expression of C in (2), decreasing its value due to the expanded gap.Replacing in (2) the new value of the gap (7.50 mm), we can find the new value of C, as follows:[tex]C = \frac{\epsilon_{o}*A}{d} = \frac{(8.85*10^{-12}F/m)*10^{-4} m2}{7.5*10^{-3}m} = 1.18*10^{-13} F (7)[/tex] In order to find the final energy stored in the capacitor, we need also the value of the final potential difference between plates.Once disconnected from the battery, the charge on any of the plates must remain the same, due to the principle of conservation of the charge.So, since we have the value of Q from (5) and the new value of C from (7), we can find the new potential difference between plates as follows:[tex]V_{f} = \frac{Q}{C_{f}} = \frac{2.7*10^{-13}C}{1.18*10^{-13}F} = 2.25 V (8)[/tex]With the values of Vf and Cf, we can find the value of the final energy stored in the capacitor, replacing these values in (1):[tex]E_{f} = \frac{1}{2} * C_{f} * V_{f} ^{2} = \frac{1}{2} * 1.18*10^{-13}F*(2.25V)^{2} = 0.3 pJ (9)[/tex]
Katelyn (55 kg) is practicing a drop jump in the biomechanics lab. She steps off a plyometrics box, lands on the force plate, and immediately jumps back up into the air. Right before she hits the force plate, her vertical velocity is 3.0 m/s downwards. After leaving the ground again, her vertical velocity is 3.5 m/s upwards. Katelyn was in contact with the ground for 0.4 seconds. (a) What was the impulse exerted on Katelyn when she was on the force plate
Answer:
J = 357.5 kg*m/s
Explanation:
The impulse exerted on Katelyn when she was on the force plate, is equal to the change in her momentum, according to Newton's 2nd Law.Assuming as the positive direction the upward direction (coincident with the positive y-axis) we can express the initial momentum as follows:[tex]p_{o} = m*v_{o} = 55 kg * (-3.0 m/s) (1)[/tex]
By the same token, the final momentum is as follows:[tex]p_{f} = m*v_{f} = 55 kg * (3.5 m/s) (2)[/tex]
As we have already said, the impulse J is just equal to the change in momentum, i.e., the difference between (2) and (1):[tex]J = p_{f} - p_{o} = m* (v_{f} -v_{o}) = 55 kg* (3.5m/s- (-3.0m/s)) = 357.5 kg*m/s (3)[/tex]
Brainliest!!! Write: Forces are all around us. Imagine that your teacher has asked you to teach a lesson to your peers about forces. Explain, in detail, how you experience forces in your everyday life. Give 3 examples
If you drag a bag across floor, you are experiencing a friction force
if you throw a paper or feather up, it floats side ways slowly. It is called air Resistance.
if you push or pull a Door, it is Normal force.
I hope this helped!
have an amazing Day!!
a) The velocity with which the basketball is thrown and its time to reach the basket if thrown at angle of 45 degrees.
b) The velocity with which the basketball is thrown and its time to reach the basket if thrown at angle of 60 degrees.
c) The velocity with which the basketball is thrown and its time to reach the basket if thrown at angle of 30 degrees.
Please list the given, find, equations used, and steps to solve.
Answer: I think the answer is b
Explanation:
can someone help me with science:
The cells within a multicellular organism are of a uniform shape.
True
or False
Answer:
trur
Explanation:
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Based on the image which parachuter will fall fastest
A
B
Or C
Explanation:
c willl fall fast then a and b
Which of the following is an
example of thermal energy?
A. turning on a lamp so you can read
B. rubbing your hands together to get warm
C. kicking a ball
The chemical energy in your food is
transformed into what type of energy in
your moving muscles?
A. Light
B. Mechanical
C. Sound
D. Electromagnetic
Answer:
Electromanetic
Explanation:ESPERO TE AYUDE
How does increasing the number of resistors in a parallel branch change the total resistance of the system?
Increasing the number of resistors in a parallel branch, decreases the total resistance of the system.
What is parallel branch?Parallel resistive circuit is one where the resistors are connected to the same two points (or nodes) and is identified by the fact that it has more than one current path connected to a common voltage source.
As more and more resistors are added in parallel to a circuit, the equivalent resistance of the circuit decreases and the total current of the circuit increases.
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An amateur blacksmith wants to cool off a 42kg glowing piece of iron, specific heat 470and decides to toss it into a 5.0 kg iron bucket with 10.0 kg of room temperature(23 C) water in it. To his surprise the water completely evaporates away (meaning once it vaporizes it is no longer part of the system) and after some time he goes to pick up the bucket but finds that the bucket is at 150 C.
Required:
What was the initial temperature of the glowing piece of iron?
Answer:
The right approach is "1479°C".
Explanation:
The given values are:
Mass of iron piece,
[tex]m_p=42 \ kg[/tex]
Mass of iron bucket,
[tex]m_I=5 \ kg[/tex]
Mass of water,
[tex]m_w=10 \ kg[/tex]
Iron's specific heat,
[tex]C_I=470 \ J/Kg^{\circ}C[/tex]
Water's specific heat,
[tex]C_w=4186 \ J/Kg^{\circ}C[/tex]
Initial temperature,
[tex]t_I=23^{\circ}C[/tex]
Final equilibrium temperature,
[tex]T=150^{\circ}C[/tex]
Latent heat,
[tex]L_v=2260\times 10^3 \ J/Kg[/tex]
As we know,
The heat lost by the glowing piece of iron will be equal to the heat gain by the iron bucket as well as water, then
⇒ [tex]m_IC_I \Delta T=m_wC_w(100-23)+m_wL_v+m_bC_I(150-23)[/tex]
On substituting the given values, we get
⇒ [tex]42\times 420\times \Delta T=10\times 4186(100-23)+10(2260\times 10^3)+5\times 420(150-23)[/tex]
⇒ [tex]17640 \Delta T=3.22\times 10^6+2.26\times 10^7+2.667\times 10^5[/tex]
⇒ [tex]\Delta T=\frac{2.60867\times 10^7}{17640}[/tex]
⇒ [tex]\Delta T=1479^{\circ}C[/tex]
Experiments carried out on the television show Mythbusters determined that a magnetic field of 1000 gauss is needed to corrupt the information on a credit card's magnetic strip. (They also busted the myth that a credit card can be demagnetized by an electric eel or an eelskin wallet.) Suppose a long, straight wire carries a current of 5.0 A .
How close can a credit card be held to this wire without damaging its magnetic strip?
Answer:
his distance is too small (r = 0.01 mm), therefore the cut can be at any distance
Explanation:
For this exercise let's use the ampere law.
Let's use a cylinder as the circulating surface
∫ B. ds = μ₀ I
in this case the field is circular and ds is circular therefore the angle between them is zero and cos 0 = 1
B 2π r = μ₀ I
r = [tex]\frac{\mu_o I}{2\pi B}[/tex]
The field needed to demagnetize the card is B = 1000 gauss = 0.1 T
r = [tex]\frac{4\pi 10^{-7} 5.0 }{2\pi \ 0.1}[/tex]
r = 2 10⁻⁷ 5.0/0.1
r = 1 10⁻⁵ m
this distance is too small (r = 0.01 mm), therefore the cut can be at any distance