Answer:
Velocity = v = 2.24m/s
Acceleration = a = 0.20m/s²
Explanation:
Please see attachment below.
Given
z=(−8 cosθ) and θ = 0.3t
z = -8Cos (0.3t)
V = dz/dt
a = v²/R.
Please see full solution below.
The roller coaster's velocity and acceleration at t=4 seconds is 7.64 m/s and 0.57 m/s² respectively.
The question is about understanding kinematics in cylindrical coordinates to analyze the motion of a roller coaster car. First, we need to understand that in polar coordinates, θ is changing with time t. So, the velocity vector v will have two components, one in the θ direction (rθ') and another in the z direction (z'). Given θ = 0.3t, we differentiate θ with respect to time to get θ' or dθ/dt = 0.3 rad/sec. Then, the z component of the velocity can be calculated by differentiating the equation of motion in the z-direction, z = -8 cos(θ), with respect to time. This gives z' = 8(0.3)sin(0.3t). So, at t=4s, z' = 8(0.3)sin(1.2) = 1.89 m/s. We then calculate rθ' = r*dθ/dt = 25*0.3 = 7.5 m/s.
The magnitude of velocity can then be calculated using the Pythagorean theorem: √((rθ')² + (z')²) = √((7.5)² + (1.89)²) = 7.64 m/s .
In a similar way, we can find the acceleration components. Given that r=25 m and is constant, radial acceleration is zero ( ar = r*(θ')²). The tangential acceleration is at = r*θ'' = r*d²θ/dt² =0 m/s² and z'' = dz'/dt = 8*0.3²*cos(0.3t). So, at t = 4s, z'' = 8(0.09)cos(1.2) = 0.57 m/s². The magnitude of the acceleration is given by √((ar)² + (at)² +(z'')²) = √((0)² + (0)² +(0.57)²)= 0.57 m/s².
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Use 1.602×10−19 C for the magnitude of the charge on an electron.
B)Find the direction of the force that this magnetic field exerts on the ball just as it enters the field.
a-from north to south
b-from south to north
Answer:
A. F=6.65*10^{-10}N
B. south - north
Explanation:
A) We use the Lorentz force
F = qv X B
|F| = qvB
to calculate the magnitude of the force we need the speed of the of the ball.
and by replacing in the formula for the magnitude of the force we have (taking into account the excess of electrons)
B)
b. south - north (by the rigth hand rule)
I hope this is usefull for you
regards
1. Electric field lines are the same thing as electric field vectors.
2. Electric field line drawings allow you to determine the approximate direction of the electric field at a point in space.
3. The number of electric field lines that start or end at a charged particle is proportional to the amount of charge on the particle.
4. The electric field is strongest where the electric field lines are close together.
Answer:
All statement are correct.
Explanation:
1. Electric field lines are the same thing as electric field vectors, electric field are mathematically vectors quantity. These vectors point in the direction in which a positive test charge would move.
2. Electric field line drawings allow you to determine the approximate direction of the electric field at a point in space. Yes it is correct tangent drawn at any point on these lines gives the direction of electric filed at that point.
3. The number of electric field lines that start or end at a charged particle is proportional to the magnitude of charge on the particle, is a correct statement.
4.The electric field is strongest where the electric field lines are close together, again a correct statement as relative closeness of field lines indicate a stronger strength of electric field.
Hence we can say that all the statement are correct.
producers
decomposers
heterotrophs
Answer:
Explanation:
Decomposers is the correct answer
Answer:
Decomposers is the right answer
Explanation:
Maggots are decomposers because they eat the dead bodys for energy
I don't know if the thing I wrote it truse so ya
Answer:
Trevor's taxi would cause higher levels of air pollution
Explanation:
Trevor's taxi use diesel oil.
Diesel is less cleaner than LPG.
Compared to automotive pollution from petrol and diesel, pollutants from LPG-driven cars include lower amounts of petroleum hydrocarbons, nitrogen oxides , sulphur oxides, ozone contamination and particulate matter.
In this problem, we have calculated the work done by Susan pulling her baby brother on a mat and the work done against friction. The net work done, which is the work done by Susan's pulling minus the work done against friction, is transformed into kinetic energy, giving us the baby's speed after being pulled 3m, which is approximately 1.95 m/s.
To answer this question, we first need to calculate the work done by Susan when she pulls the mat over the distance of 3.0 meters. The angle at which the rope is pulled does make a difference in this calculation. The force that is actually contributing to the work is the horizontal component of the tension, which can be determined by the equation Fh = F cos θ which equals 30N * cos30 = 25.98N.
The work done, W, is equal to this force multiplied by the displacement, so W = Fd = 25.98N * 3m = 77.94 Joules.
Next, we need to calculate the work done against friction. The force of friction is calculated as Ff = µN. Here N is the normal force, which is equal to the weight of the baby, so N = mg = 10kg * 9.8m/s² = 98N. The force of friction then is Ff = µN = 0.20 * 98N = 19.6N. The work done against friction is Wf = Ff * d = 19.6N * 3m = 58.8 Joules.
The net work done on the baby is the work done by Susan minus the work done against friction, so Wnet = W - Wf = 77.94J - 58.8J = 19.14 Joules. This net work is equal to the change in kinetic energy of the baby, ∆K, since Kinitial = 0 (Paul starts at rest), the work done is all transformed into final kinetic energy. So ∆K = 19.14J.
The kinetic energy of an object is given by the equation K = 1/2 mv², so we have 19.14J = 1/2 * 10kg * v². Solving for v gives us roughly v = 1.95 m/s. Therefore, the speed of the baby after being pulled 3 meters is approximately 1.95 m/s.
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To determine Paul's speed, we must calculate the net work done on him using the work-energy theorem. This includes the work done by Susan and the work done against friction. Paul’s speed after being pulled 3.0 m is approximately 1.96 m/s.
Solving this problem involves understanding the work-energy theorem and forces. First, let's calculate the work done. The work done by the force Susan applies (W1) is the product of the tension (T), the distance (d), and the cosine of the angle (θ). W1 = T * d * cos(θ) = 30N * 3.0m * cos(30) = 77.94J.
Next, the work done against friction (W2) is the product of the frictional force and the distance, which is µmgd. Here, µ is the coefficient of friction (0.20), m (10kg) is the mass of the baby, g (9.8m/s2) is the acceleration due to gravity, and d is the distance (3.0 m). W2 = µmgd = 0.20 * 10kg * 9.8m/s2 * 3.0m = 58.8J.
According to the work-energy theorem, the net work done on an object is equal to the change in its kinetic energy. Therefore, the final kinetic energy (and thus the final speed) of Paul will be the initial kinetic energy plus the net work done on him. His initial speed is assumed to be zero, hence the initial kinetic energy is zero. The net work done on him is W = W1 - W2= 77.94J - 58.8J = 19.14J. Setting this equal to the final kinetic energy, (1/2)mv2, allows us to solve for the final speed, v = sqrt((2 * W)/m) = sqrt((2 * 19.14J)/10kg) = 1.96 m/s approximately.
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Answer:
a)2.46 %
b)For 1 :101.52 %
For 2 : 99.08 %
c)100..4 %
Explanation:
Given that
g₁ = 9.96 m/s²
g₂ = 9.72 m/s²
The actual value of g = 9.8 m/s²
a)
The difference Δ g = 9.96 -9.72 =0.24 m/s²
b)
For first one :
For second :
c)
The mean g(mean )
a)2.46 %
b)For 1 :101.52 %
For 2 : 99.08 %
c)100..4 %
The percent difference between the two measurements is 2.44%. The percent error for the first measurement is 1.63%, and for the second measurement is 0.82%. The percent error of their mean is 0.41%.
In physics, the percent difference is calculated by subtracting the two values, taking the absolute value, dividing by the average of the two values, and then multiplying by 100. Therefore, the percent difference between the two measurements 9.96m/s² and 9.72m/s² is:
|(9.96-9.72)|/((9.96+9.72)/2)*100 = 2.44%
The percent error involves taking the absolute difference between the experimental value and the accepted value, divided by the accepted value, then multiplied by 100. So, the percent error for the two measurements with accepted value of 9.80m/s² are:
For 9.96m/s²: |(9.96-9.80)|/9.80*100 = 1.63%
For 9.72m/s²: |(9.72-9.8)|/9.8*100 = 0.82%
The percent error of the mean involves doing the above but using the mean of the experimental measurements:
|(Mean of measurements - Accepted value)|/Accepted value * 100 |(9.96+9.72)/2-9.8|/9.8*100 = 0.41%
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