Answer:
1.0 dioptres
Explanation:
Farsightedness is an eye defect in which a person can see far objects clearly but not near objects. That implies that the patients' near point is farther than 25cm which is the normal least distance of distinct vision.
Farsightedness results from the eyeball being too long or the crystalline lens not being sufficiently converging.
Carol is farsighted with a near point of about a meter (100cm). We desire to make a lens to enable her near point be reduced to about 50cm. The focal length and power of this lens is calculated in the image attached.
The power of a lens is the inverse of its focal length in meters hence the 100 in the formula for power of the lens.
Answer:
+1.00 diopter
Explanation:
The power of a lens can be described simply as the reciprocal of the focal length of the lens measured in meters.
But f is unknown, hence we look for the focal length with the formula
1/f = 1/u + 1/v
where u is former near point = 100cm
v is the new intended near point = 50cm
1/f = 1/50 - 1/100
1/f = 1/100
f = 100 cm
Hence we get Power (D) = 1/f
where f = focal length of the lens in meter
From the question, the focal length of the lens = 100cm = 1m
Hence D = 1/1
D = +1.00
Hence the refractive power of the reading glasses that would allow Carol to read a book 50cm away from the relaxed eye will be +1.00 diopters.
Answer:
separation between the slits is 0.28 mm
Explanation:
given data
wave length λ = 589 nm = 589 × m
distance between slits and the screen D = 0.91 m
fringes weight y = 0.19 cm = 0.19 × m
solution
we find here the spacing between the two slits i.e d
so use here formula that is
y = λD ÷ d .........................1
put here value we get
0.19 × =
solve we get
d = 0.28 mm
Answer:
0.0000000026 T
Explanation:
= Maximum electric field strength = 0.78 V/m
= Maximum magnetic field strength
c = Speed of light =
Relation between amplitudes of electric and magnetic fields is given by
The amplitude of the magnetic field is 0.0000000026 T
Answer:
The magnitude of the friction force exerted on the box is 2.614 newtons.
Explanation:
Since the box is sliding on a rough horizontal floor, then it is decelerated solely by friction force due to the contact of the box with floor. The free body diagram of the box is presented herein as attachment. The equation of equilbrium for the box is:
(Eq. 1)
Where:
- Kinetic friction force, measured in newtons.
- Mass of the box, measured in kilograms.
- Acceleration experimented by the box, measured in meters per square second.
By applying definitions of weight () and uniform accelerated motion (), we expand the previous expression:
And the magnitude of the friction force exerted on the box is calculated by this formula:
(Eq. 1b)
Where:
- Weight, measured in newtons.
- Gravitational acceleration, measured in meters per square second.
- Initial speed, measured in meters per second.
- Final speed, measured in meters per second.
- Time, measured in seconds.
If we know that , , , and , the magnitud of the kinetic friction force exerted on the box is:
The magnitude of the friction force exerted on the box is 2.614 newtons.
The magnitude of the friction force acting on the box is determined by calculating the box's acceleration, establishing its mass based on its weight information, and applying these values in Newton's second law. The calculated value is 2.62 N.
To determine the magnitude of the friction force, we first have to compute the acceleration of the box. Acceleration (a) can be found using the formula 'final velocity - initial velocity / time'. Since the final velocity is 0 (the box stops), and the initial velocity is 1.37 m/s, and the time is 2.8 s, we get: a = (0 - 1.37) / 2.8 = -0.49 m/s^2. The negative sign indicates deceleration.
Next, we use Newton's second law, which states that the net force acting on an object is equal to its mass times its acceleration. The net force in this case is the frictional force because there is no other force acting on the box in the horizontal direction. However, we do not know the mass of the box, but we do know its weight, and weight = mass x gravitational acceleration (g). So mass = weight/g = 52.4N / 9.8m/s^2 = 5.35 kg.
Lastly, we substitute the mass and deceleration into Newton's second law to find the frictional force (f): f = mass x deceleration = 5.35kg x -0.49m/s^2 = -2.62 N. Again, the negative sign indicates that the force acts opposite to the direction of motion. Thus, the frictional force magnitude is 2.62 N.
#SPJ3
Answer:
Explanation:
a )
Time period T = 1/3 s
angular velocity = 2π / T
= 2 x 3.14 x 3
ω = 18.84 radian / s
b )
Applying conservation of angular momentum
I₁ ω₁ = I₂ ω₂
I₁ / I₂ = ω₂ / ω₁
2 = ω₂ / ω
ω₂ = 2 ω
c )
(KE)initial = 1/2 I₁ ω²
(KE)final = 1/2 I₂ ω₂²
= 1/2 (I₁ / 2) (2ω)²
= I₁ ω²
c )
Change in rotational kinetic energy
= I₁ ω² - 1/2 I₁ ω²
= + 1/2 I₁ ω²
d )
This energy comes from the work done by centripetal force which is increased to increase the speed of rotation.
Rewrite the amounts as improper fractions:
9 2/3 = 29/3
3 7/8 = 31/8
Rewrite both fractions with a common denominator
29/3 = 232/24
31/8 = 93/24
Now subtract: 232/24 - 93/24 = 139/24
Rewrite as a proper fraction: 5 19/24
Answer 5 19/24
Select the correct answer
You travel in a circle, whose circumference is 8 kilometers, at an average speed of 8 kilometers/hour. If you stop at the same point you started
from, what is your average velocity?
A
0 kilometers/hour
B.
2 kilometers/hour
4 kilometers/hour
D
8 kilometers/hour
E.
16 kilometers/hour
Rese
Velocity depends on the straight-line distance between your start-point and your end-point, regardless of what route you follow to get there.
If you stop at the same point where you started, then that distance is zero, no matter how far you drove before you returned to your start-point.
So the average velocity around any "CLOSED" path is zero. (A)