Answer: The force on a negative charge that is placed midway between two equal positive charges is zero when all charges have the same magnitude.
Explanation:
Let us assume that
[tex]q_{1} = q_{2} = +q[/tex]
[tex]q_{3} = -q[/tex]
As [tex]q_{3}[/tex] is the negative charge and placed midway between two equal positive charges ([tex]q_{1}[/tex] and [tex]q_{2}[/tex]).
Total distance between [tex]q_{1}[/tex] and [tex]q_{2}[/tex] is 2r. This means that the distance between [tex]q_{1}[/tex] and [tex]q_{3}[/tex], [tex]q_{2}[/tex] and [tex]q_{3}[/tex] = d = r
Now, force action on charge [tex]q_{3}[/tex] due to [tex]q_{1}[/tex] is as follows.
[tex]F_{31} = k(\frac{q_{1} \times q_{3}}{d^{2}})[/tex]
where,
k = electrostatic constant = [tex]9 \times 10^{9} Nm^{2}/C^{2}[/tex]
Substitute the values into above formula as follows.
[tex]F_{31} = k(\frac{q_{1} \times q_{3}}{d^{2}})\\= 9 \times 10^{9} (\frac{q \times (-q)}{r^{2}})\\= - 9 \times 10^{9} (\frac{q^{2}}{r^{2}})[/tex] ... (1)
Similarly, force acting on [tex]q_{3}[/tex] due to [tex]q_{1}[/tex] is as follows.
[tex]F_{32} = k \frac{q_{2}q_{3}}{d^{2}}\\= -9 \times 10^{9} \frac{q^{2}}{r^{2}}\\[/tex] ... (2)
As both the forces represented in equation (1) and (2) are same and equal in magnitude. This means that the net force acting on charge [tex]q_{3}[/tex] is zero.
Thus, we can conclude that the force on a negative charge that is placed midway between two equal positive charges is zero when all charges have the same magnitude.
Strategies for good health management involve:
A Avoiding stressful situations that may cause depression or moodiness insomnia, or lack motivation.
B) Denying, ignoring, or repressing feelings or problems, so that you don't have to face them.
Eating your favorite foods, imagining yourself working out (mind is power), sleeping a few hours a day, so as to make
the most of party time.
D Eating healthy, maintaining and ideal weight, resting, exercising, and establishing healthy relationships.
Answer:
D
Explanation:
This is a great way to manage health.
A would be avoiding everything which isnt good.
B. would be emotionally draining and damaging to bottle feelings and ignore them.
C. is unhealthy to not exercise and eat food while doing nothing.
Shooting a rock with a slingshot converts
energy to__________,
energy____________,
Answer:
converts elastic energy to mechanical energy
Explanation:
~~~NEED HELP ASAP~~~
Please solve each section and show all work for each section.
Explanation:
Forces on Block A:
Let the x-axis be (+) towards the right and y-axis be (+) in the upward direction. We can write the net forces on mass [tex]m_A[/tex] as
[tex]x:\:\:(F_{net})_x = f_N - T = -m_Aa\:\:\:\:\:\:\:(1)[/tex]
[tex]y:\:\:(F_{net})_y = N - m_Ag = 0 \:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:(2)[/tex]
Substituting (2) into (1), we get
[tex]\mu_km_Ag - T = -m_Aa \:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:(3)[/tex]
where [tex]f_N= \mu_kN[/tex], the frictional force on [tex]m_A.[/tex] Set this aside for now and let's look at the forces on [tex]m_B[/tex]
Forces on Block B:
Let the x-axis be (+) up along the inclined plane. We can write the forces on [tex]m_B[/tex] as
[tex]x:\:\:(F_{net})_x = T - m_B\sin30= -m_Ba\:\:\:\:\:\:\:(4)[/tex]
[tex]y:\:\:(F_{net})_y = N - m_Bg\cos30 = 0 \:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:(5)[/tex]
From (5), we can solve for N as
[tex]N = m_B\cos30 \:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:(6)[/tex]
Set (6) aside for now. We will use this expression later. From (3), we can see that the tension T is given by
[tex]T = m_A( \mu_kg + a)\:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:(7)[/tex]
Substituting (7) into (4) we get
[tex]m_A(\mu_kg + a) - m_Bg\sin 30 = -m_Ba[/tex]
Collecting similar terms together, we get
[tex](m_A + m_B)a = m_Bg\sin30 - \mu_km_Ag[/tex]
or
[tex]a = \left[ \dfrac{m_B\sin30 - \mu_km_A}{(m_A + m_B)} \right]g\:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:\:(8)[/tex]
Putting in the numbers, we find that [tex]a = 1.4\:\text{m/s}[/tex]. To find the tension T, put the value for the acceleration into (7) and we'll get [tex]T = 21.3\:\text{N}[/tex]. To find the force exerted by the inclined plane on block B, put the numbers into (6) and you'll get [tex]N = 50.9\:\text{N}[/tex]
trình bày nguyên lý Đa lăm be
a tiger covers a distance of 600 m in 15 minutes what is a speed of a tiger?
Answer: 2.4 km/hr
Explanation:
Distance = 600m
Time= 15 minutes = 15 x 60 second/minute = 900 seconds
Speed = [tex]\frac{Distance}{Time}[/tex] = [tex]\frac{600}{900}[/tex] = [tex]\frac{2}{3}[/tex] m/sec
⇒ [tex]\frac{2}{3}[/tex] x [tex]\frac{18}{5}[/tex] = 2.4 km/hr (1 m/sec = 3.6 km/hr)
Explain whether the unit of work is a fundamental or derived unit
Answer:
answer here
Explanation:
the unit of work is fundamental unit because it doesn't depend on other units.
__________________
Thx
Answer:
The SI unit of work is joule (J)
Explanation:
Joule is a derived unit. ∴ unit of work is a derived unit
A uniformly dense solid disk with a mass of 4 kg and a radius of 4 m is free to rotate around an axis that passes through the center of the disk and perpendicular to the plane of the disk. The rotational kinetic energy of the disk is increasing at 21 J/s. If the disk starts from rest through what angular displacement (in rad) will it have rotated after 3.3 s?
Answer:
3.44 rad
Explanation:
The rotational kinetic energy change of the disk is given by ΔK = 1/2I(ω² - ω₀²) where I = rotational inertia of solid sphere = MR²/2 where m = mass of solid disk = 4 kg and R = radius of solid disk = 4 m, ω₀ = initial angular speed of disk = 0 rad/s (since it starts from rest) and ω = final angular speed of disk
Since the kinetic energy is increasing at a rate of 21 J/s, the increase in kinetic energy in 3.3 s is ΔK = 21 J/s × 3.3 s = 69.3 J
So, ΔK = 1/2I(ω² - ω₀²)
Since ω₀ = 0 rad/s
ΔK = 1/2I(ω² - 0)
ΔK = 1/2Iω²
ΔK = 1/2(MR²/2)ω²
ΔK = MR²ω²/4
ω² = (4ΔK/MR²)
ω = √(4ΔK/MR²)
ω = 2√(ΔK/MR²)
Substituting the values of the variables into the equation, we have
ω = 2√(ΔK/MR²)
ω = 2√(69.3 J/( 4 kg × (4 m)²))
ω = 2√(69.3 J/[ 4 kg × 16 m²])
ω = 2√(69.3 J/64 kgm²)
ω = 2√(1.083 J/kgm²)
ω = 2 × 1.041 rad/s
ω = 2.082 rad/s
The angular displacement θ is gotten from
θ = ω₀t + 1/2αt² where ω₀ = initial angular speed = 0 rad/s (since it starts from rest), t = time of rotation = 3.3 s and α = angular acceleration = (ω - ω₀)/t = (2.082 rad/s - 0 rad/s)/3.3 s = 2.082 rad/s ÷ 3.3 s = 0.631 rad/s²
Substituting the values of the variables into the equation, we have
θ = ω₀t + 1/2αt²
θ = 0 rad/s × 3.3 s + 1/2 × 0.631 rad/s² (3.3 s)²
θ = 0 rad + 1/2 × 0.631 rad/s² × 10.89 s²
θ = 1/2 × 6.87159 rad
θ = 3.436 rad
θ ≅ 3.44 rad
A heat engine exhausts 3 000 J of heat while performing 1 500 J of useful work. What is the efficiency of the engine
efficiency=work output/work input×100
since it exhausts(use up)3000j of heat that's the work input and the 1500j is the work input
efficiency=1500/3000×100
=50%
Starting from rest, a wheel undergoes constant angular acceleration for a period of time T. At which of the following times does the average angular acceleration equal the instantaneous angular acceleration?
a. 0.50 T
b. 0.67 T
c. 0.71 T
d. all of the above
why do you like the full moon ?
Answer:
The Moon brings perspective. Observing the Moon, and I mean really looking – sitting comfortably, or lying down on a patch of grass and letting her light fill your eyes, it's easy to be reminded of how ancient and everlasting the celestial bodies are. When I do this, it always puts my life into perspective.Answer:
because it look more impressive than empty dark sky .
Diffuse reflection occurs when parallel light waves strike which surface? a mirror a rippling fountain a polished silver plate a still pond
Answer: a rippling fountain
Explanation: diffuse reflection happens on rough surfaces, so using the process of elimination, that leaves us with b, a rippling fountain (I also just took this test I'm pretty sure I'm right)
If the source moves, the wavelength of the sound in front of the direction of motion is____than the wavelength behind the direction of motion.
a. the same.
b. smaller than.
c. unrealted to.
d. larger then.
Answer:
B. Smaller than
Explanation:
This question is from the Doppler effect. As the object which is in motion goes off from the other, there's a reduction in the frequency. This is due to the fact that successive soundwave get to be longer. So that the pitch will then be lowered. When the person observing moves towards what is making the sound, each soundwave that follows gets faster than the previous.
A current of 5.50 A flows in a conductor for 7.5 s. How much charge passes a given point in the conductor during this time?
A 15.0-m uniform ladder weighing 500 N rests against a frictionless wall. The ladder makes a 60.08 angle with the horizontal. (a) Find the horizontal and vertical forces the ground exerts on the base of the ladder when an 800-N firefighter has climbed 4.00 m along the ladder from the bottom. (b) If the ladder is just on the verge of slipping when the firefighter is 9.00 m from the bottom, what is the coefficient of static friction between ladder and ground
Answer:
a) fr = 266.92 N, fy = 1300 N, b) μ = 0.36
Explanation:
a) This is a balancing act.
Let's write the rotational equilibrium relations, where the turning point is the bottom of the ladder and the counterclockwise rotations are positive
-w x - W x₂ + R y = 0 (1)
usemso trigonometry to find distances
cos 60.08 = x / 7.5
x = 7.5 cos 60.08
x = 3.74 m
fireman
cos 60.08 = x₂ / 4
x2 = 4 cos 60
x2 = 2 m
wall support
sin 60.08 = y / 15
y = 15 are 60.08
y = 13 m
we substitute in equation 1
R y = w x + W x2
R = (w x + W x2) / y
R = (500 3.74 +800 2) / 13
R = 266.92 N
now let's write the expressions for the translational equilibrium
X axis
R -fr = 0
R = fr
fr = 266.92 N
Y Axis
Fy - w-W = 0
fy = 500 + 800
fy = 1300 N
b) ask the friction coefficient
the firefighter's distance is
cos 60.08 = x₃ / 9.00
x₃ = 9 cos 60
x₃ = 5.28 m
from equation 1
R = (w x + W x₃) / y
R = 500 3.74 + 800 5.28) / 13
R = 468.769 N
we saw that
fr = R = 468.769
The expression for the friction force is
fr = μ N
in this case the normal is the ratio to pesos
N = Fy
N = 1300 N
μ N = fr
μ = fr / N
μ = 468,769 / 1300
μ = 0.36
What is the maximum distance the train can travel if it accelerates from rest until it reaches its cruising speed and then runs at that speed for 15 minutes
The question is incomplete. The complete question is :
A high-speed bullet train accelerates and decelerates at the rate of 4 ft/s^2. Its maximum cruising speed is 90 mi/h. What is the maximum distance the train can travel if it accelerates from rest until it reaches its cruising speed and then runs at that speed for 15 minutes?
Solution :
Given :
Speed of the bullet train, v = 90 mi/h
= [tex]$90 \times \frac{5280}{3600}$[/tex]
= 132 ft/s
Time = 15 minutes
= 15 x 60
= 900 s
Acceleration from rest,
[tex]$a(t) = 4 \ ft/s^2$[/tex]
[tex]$v(t) = 4t + C$[/tex]
Since, v(0) = 0, then C = 0, so velocity is
v(t) = 4t ft/s
Then find the position function,
[tex]$s(t) = \frac{4}{2}t^2 + C$[/tex]
[tex]$=2t^2+C$[/tex]
It is at position 0 when t = 0, so C = 0, and the final position function for only the time it is accelerating is :
[tex]$s(t) = 2t^2$[/tex]
Time to get maximum cruising speed is :
4t = 132
t = 33 s
Distance travelled (at cruising speed) by speed to get the remaining distance travelled.
[tex]$900 \ s \times 132 \ \frac{ft}{s} = 118800 \ ft$[/tex]
Total distance travelled, converting back to miles,
[tex]$2178 + 118800 = 120978\ ft . \ \frac{mi}{5280 \ ft}$[/tex]
= 22.9125 mi
Therefore, the distance travelled is 22.9125 miles
A 165-km-long high-voltage transmission line 2.00 cm in diameter carries a steady current of 1,015 A. If the conductor is copper with a free charge density of 8.50 1028 electrons per cubic meter, how many years does it take one electron to travel the full length of the cable?
Answer:
22.1 years
Explanation:
Since the current in the wire is I = nevA where n = electron density = 8.50 × 10²⁸ electrons/cm³ × 10⁶ cm³/m³= 8.50 × 10³⁴ electrons/m³, e = electron charge = 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ C, v = drift velocity of electrons and A = cross-sectional area of wire = πd²/4 where d = diameter of wire = 2.00 cm = 2 × 10⁻² m
Making v subject of the formula, we have
v = I/neA
So, v = I/neπd²/4
v = 4I/neπd²
Since I = 1,015 A, substituting the values of the other variables into the equation, we have
v = 4I/neπd²
v = 4(1,015 A)/[8.50 × 10³⁴ electrons/m³ × 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ C × π ×(2 × 10⁻² m)²]
v = 4(1,015 A)/[8.50 × 10³⁴ electrons/m³ × 1.602 × 10⁻¹⁹ C × π × 4 × 10⁻⁴ m²]
v = (1,015 A)/[42.779 × 10¹¹ electronsC/m]
v = 23.73 × 10⁻¹¹ m/s
v = 2.373 × 10⁻¹⁰ m/s
Since distance d = speed, v × time, t
d = vt
So, the time it takes one electron to travel the full length of the cable is t = d/v
Since d = distance moved by free charge = length of transmission line = 165 km = 165 × 10³ m and v = drift velocity of charge = 2.373 × 10⁻¹⁰ m/s
t = 165 × 10³ m/2.373 × 10⁻¹⁰ m/s
t = 69.54 × 10⁷ s
t = 6.954 × 10⁸ s
Since we have 365 × 24 hr/day × 60 min/hr × 60 s/min = 31536000 s in a year = 3.1536 × 10⁷ s
So, 6.954 × 10⁸ s = 6.954 × 10⁸ s × 1yr/3.1536 × 10⁷ s = 2.21 × 10 yrs = 22.1 years
It will take one electron 22.1 years to travel the full length of the cable
A car accelerates at 2 meters/s/s. Assuming the car starts from rest how far will it travel in 10 seconds
Answer:
Distance = velocity x time, so 10 m/s X 10 s = 100 m
Explanation:
If you accelerate at 2 m/s^2 for 10 seconds, at the end of the 10 seconds you are moving at a rate of 20 m/s.
V(f) = V(i) + a*t
Final velocity = initial velocity + acceleration x time
Your average velocity will be half of your final, because you accelerated at a constant rate. So your average velocity is 10 m/s.
Distance = velocity x time, so 10 m/s X 10 s = 100 m
Answer:
100 m
Explanation:
Given,
Initial velocity ( u ) = 0 m/s
Acceleration ( a ) = 2 m/s^2
Time ( t ) = 10 sec s
To find : Displacement ( s ) = ?
By 2nd equation of motion,
s = ut + at^2 / 2
= ( 0 ) ( 10 ) + ( 2 ) ( 10 )^2 / 2
= 0 + ( 2 ) ( 100 ) / 2
= 200 / 2
s = 100 m
A 1.64 kg mass on a spring oscillates horizontal frictionless surface. The motion of the mass is described by the equation: X = 0.33cos(3.17t). In the equation, x is measured in meters and t in seconds. What is the maximum energy stored in the spring during an oscillation?
Answer:
[tex]K.E_{max}=0.8973J[/tex]
Explanation:
From the question we are told that:
Mass [tex]m=1.64kg[/tex]
Equation of Mass
[tex]X=0.33cos(3.17t)[/tex]...1
Generally equation for distance X is
[tex]X=Acos(\omega t)[/tex]...2
Therefore comparing equation
Angular Velocity [tex]\omega=3.17rad/s[/tex]
Amplitude A=0.33
Generally the equation for Max speed is mathematically given by
[tex]V_{max}=A\omega[/tex]
[tex]V_{max}=0.33*3.17[/tex]
[tex]V_{max}=1.0461m/s[/tex]
Therefore
[tex]K.E_{max}=0.5mv^2[/tex]
[tex]K.E_{max}=0.5*1.64*(1.0461)^2[/tex]
[tex]K.E_{max}=0.8973J[/tex]
The slope of a d vs t graph represents velocity. Describe 3 ways you know this to be true.
Answer:
Look at explanation
Explanation:
I only know 1 way, there is another way you can rephrase this using derivatives but that's pretty much the same thing.
The slope is calculated by Δy/Δx so the slope of distance vs time graph is Δd/Δt which is the velocity
Please help,it is urgent!)
Answer:
answer is 18.58 because
Answer:
My answer is d.25.1 because
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Answer:
I DON'T UNDERSTAND
Explanation:
GUESS A MISUNDERSTANDING PLZ PUT A UNDERSTANDABLE QUESTION.
Cell phone conversations are transmitted by high-frequency radio waves. Suppose the signal has wavelength 35 cm while traveling through air. What are the
(a) frequency and
(b) wavelength as the signal travels through 3-mm-thick window glass into your room?
Answer:
(a) 8.57 x 10^8 Hz
(b) 23.3 cm
Explanation:
Wavelength = 35 cm = 0.35 m
speed =3 x10^8 m/s
Let the frequency is f.
(a) The relation is
speed = frequency x wavelength
3 x 10^8 = 0.35 x f
f = 8.57 x 10^8 Hz
(b) refractive index of glass is 1.5
The relation for the refractive index and the wavelength is
wavelength in glass= wavelength in air/ refractive index.
Wavelength in glass= 35/1.5 = 23.3 cm
If the sum of the external forces on an object is zero, then the sum of the external torques on it
must also be zero.
A) True
B) False
Answer:
True.
Explanation:
If the sum of the external forces on an object is zero, then the sum of the external torques on it must also be zero.
The net external force and the net external torque acting on the object have to be zero for an object to be in mechanical equilibrium.
Hence, the given statement is true.
if a body covers 100m in 5 second from rest find the acceleration produced by a body in 10 second
Answer:
a=10m/s^2
Explanation:
acceleration= final velocity+ initial velocity/time taken
v-u/t=a
100-0/5=a
100/5=a
a=20m/s^2
case2
100-0/10=a
100/10=a
a=10m/s^2
Don't forget to write the units.
Hope this helps
please mark me as brainliest.
find the distance travelled by a moving body if it attained acceleration of 2m/s2 after starting from rest in 5min
Answer:
300 meters
Explanation:
a= 2m/s^2
t= 5 min
Convert into seconds, 5*60= 300seconds
v0= 0
x0=0
use x-x0= v0t + 1/2at^2
plug in values
x= 1/2*2*(300)
Solve
x= 300 meters
A charge of 0.20uC is 30cm from a point charge of 3.0uC in vacuum. what work is required to bring the 0.2uC charge 18cm closer to the 3.0uC charge?
Answer:
The correct answer is "[tex]4.49\times 10^{10} \ joules[/tex]".
Explanation:
According to the question,
The work will be:
⇒ [tex]Work=-\frac{kQq}{R}[/tex]
[tex]=-\frac{1}{4 \pi \varepsilon \times (18-30)\times 3\times 0.2}[/tex]
[tex]=-\frac{1}{4 \pi \varepsilon \times (-12)\times 3\times 0.2}[/tex]
[tex]=\frac{0.3978}{\varepsilon }[/tex]
[tex]=4.49\times 10^{10} \ joules[/tex]
Thus the above is the correct answer.
We have that the workdone is mathematically given as
W=4.49*10e10 J
From the question we are told
A charge of 0.20uC is 30cm from a point charge of 3.0uC in vacuum. what work is required to bring the 0.2uC charge 18cm closer to the 3.0uC charge?WorkdoneGenerally the equation for the workdone is mathematically given as
W=-kQq/R
Therefore
0.3978/ε0 =-1/(4πε0*(18-30)*3*0.2
Hence
W=4.49*10e10 JFor more information on Charge visit
https://brainly.com/question/9383604
Question 9 of 10
According to the law of conservation of momentum, the total initial
momentum equals the total final momentum in a(n)
A. Interacting system
B. System interacting with one other system
C. Isolated system
D. System of balanced forces
Answer:
The answer is C. Isolated System
Answer:
C. Isolated system
Explanation :
∵According to law of conservation of momentum ,In an isolated system ,the total momentum remains conserved.
A transverse sine wave with an amplitude of 2.50 mm and a wavelength of 1.80 m travels, from left to right along a long, horizontal stretched string with a speed of 36.0 m s. I Take the origin at the left end of the undisturbed string. At time t = 0 the left end of the string has its maximum upward displacement,
(a) What is the frequency of the wave?
(b) What is the angular frequency of the wave?
(c) What is the wave number of the wave?
(d) What is the function y(x,t) that describes the wave?
(e) What is y(t) for a particle at the left end of the string?
(f) What is y(t) for a particle 1.35 m to the right of the origin?
(g) What is the maximum magnitude of transverse velocity of any particle of the string?
(h) Find the transverse displacement of a particle 1.35 m to the right of the origin at time t = 0.0625 s.
(i) Find the transverse velocity of a particle 1.35 m to the right of the origin at time t = 0.0625 s.
Explanation:
Given that,
Amplitude, A = 2.5 nm
Wavelength,[tex]\lambda=1.8\ m[/tex]
The speed of the wave, v = 36 m/s
At time t = 0 the left end of the string has its maximum upward displacement.
(a) Let f is the frequency. So,
[tex]f=\dfrac{v}{\lambda}\\\\f=\dfrac{36}{1.8}\\\\f=20\ Hz[/tex]
(b) Angular frequency of the wave,
[tex]\omega=2\pi f\\\\=2\pi \times 20\\\\=125.7\ rad/s[/tex]
(c) The wave number of the wave[tex]=\dfrac{1}{\lambda}[/tex]
[tex]=\dfrac{1}{1.8}\\\\=0.56\ m^{-1}[/tex]
A basketball of mass 0.608 kg is dropped from rest from a height of 1.37 m. It rebounds to a height of 0.626 m.
(a) How much mechanical energy was lost during the collision with the floor?
(b) A basketball player dribbles the ball from a height of 1.37 m by exerting a constant downward force on it for a distance of 0.132 m. In dribbling, the player compensates for the mechanical energy lost during each bounce. If the ball now returns to a height of 1.37 m, what is the magnitude of the force?
Answer:
a)[tex]|\Delta E|=4.58\: J[/tex]
b)[tex]F=61.90\: N[/tex]
Explanation:
a)
We can use conservation of energy between these heights.
[tex]\Delta E=mgh_{2}-mgh_{1}=mg(h_{2}-h_{1})[/tex]
[tex]\Delta E=0.608*9.81(0.6026-1.37)[/tex]
Therefore, the lost energy is:
[tex]|\Delta E|=4.58\: J[/tex]
b)
The force acting along the distance create a work, these work is equal to the potential energy.
[tex]W=\Delta E[/tex]
[tex]F*d=mgh[/tex]
Let's solve it for F.
[tex]F=\frac{mgh}{d}[/tex]
[tex]F=\frac{0.608*9.81*1.37}{0.132}[/tex]
Therefore, the force is:
[tex]F=61.90\: N[/tex]
I hope is helps you!
The north pole of magnet A will __?____ the south pole of magnet B
Answer:
A will attract
B will repare