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KatRina [158]
2 years ago
11

4720 kj of energy are supplied to a material in order to raise its temperature by 65k. if the specific heat capacity of the mate

rial is 2730 j kg-1 k-1 then what is its mass? a. 37.59 kg b. 112.38 kg c. 26.59 kg d. 30.62 kg
Physics
1 answer:
jeka57 [31]2 years ago
6 0

The mass of material is 26.6 Kg

Given:

Q = 4720 KJ

Change in Temperature (AT) = 65 K

Specific heat capacity of material (c) = 2730 J K Kg*K

The relation between Q, AT, c and m are related by following formula: Q=m* c*∆T,

Plugging value in heat formula:

4720KJ = m* 2730 J/Kg*K * 65K

4720KJ = m * 177450J/kg

Converting 177450 J/kg to Kg/KJ

177450 J/kg*1KJ/1000J = 177.450KJ/kg

Dividing both side by 177.450KJ/kg

4720KJ/177.450KJ/Kg = m*177.450KJ/Kg÷ 177.450KJ/Kg

Hence, the mass of material = 26.6 Kg

Learn more about Mass here:

brainly.com/question/19385703

#SPJ4

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A uniform electric field exists in the region between two oppositely charged plane parallel plates. A proton is released from re
valentinak56 [21]

Answer:

a) 17.33 V/m

b) 6308 m/s

Explanation:

We start by using equation of motion

s = ut + 1/2at², where

s = 1.2 cm = 0.012 m

u = 0 m/s

t = 3.8*10^-6 s, so that

0.012 = 0 * 3.8*10^-6 + 0.5 * a * (3.8*10^-6)²

0.012 = 0.5 * a * 1.444*10^-11

a = 0.012 / 7.22*10^-12

a = 1.66*10^9 m/s²

If we assume the electric field to be E, and we know that F =qE. Also, from Newton's law, we have F = ma. So that, ma = qE, and E = ma/q, where

E = electric field

m = mass of proton

a = acceleration

q = charge of proton

E = (1.67*10^-27 * 1.66*10^9) / 1.6*10^-19

E = 2.77*10^-18 / 1.6*10^-19

E = 17.33 V/m

Final speed of the proton can be gotten by using

v = u + at

v = 0 + 1.66*10^9 * 3.8*10^-6

v = 6308 m/s

5 0
3 years ago
This is culinary arts (cooking) can someone help me with this please it’s due today
umka21 [38]

Answehmmm

Explanation:

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3 years ago
A 20 kg box has 1000 joules of potential energy on a shelf. How high is the shelf?
navik [9.2K]
Formula: PE = mgh
m = 20 kg, g = 9.8 m/s^2 h= ?
1000 = 20 * 9.8 * h
1000 = 196h
h = 5.10204082
The height is around 5m
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3 years ago
Sunlight has its maximum intensity at a wavelength of 4.83 x 10'm; wha energy does this correspond to in e?
Lera25 [3.4K]

Answer:

E = 2,575 eV

Explanation:

For this exercise we will use the Planck equation and the relationship of the speed of light with the frequency and wavelength

     E = h f

     c = λ f

Where the Planck constant has a value of 6.63 10⁻³⁴ J s

Let's replace

    E = h c / λ

Let's calculate for wavelengths

    λ = 4.83 10-7 m     (blue)

    E = 6.63 10⁻³⁴ 3 10⁸ / 4.83 10⁻⁷

    E = 4.12 10-19 J

The transformation from J to eV is 1 eV = 1.6 10⁻¹⁹ J

    E = 4.12 10⁻¹⁹ J (1 eV / 1.6 10⁻¹⁹ J)

    E = 2,575 eV

5 0
4 years ago
a ball of mass 100g moving at a velocity of 100m/s collides with another ball of mass 400g moving at 50m/s in same direction, if
klio [65]

Answer:

Velocity of the two balls after collision: 60\; \rm m \cdot s^{-1}.

100\; \rm J of kinetic energy would be lost.

Explanation:

<h3>Velocity</h3>

Because the question asked about energy, convert all units to standard units to keep the calculation simple:

  • Mass of the first ball: 100\; \rm g = 0.1\; \rm kg.
  • Mass of the second ball: 400\; \rm g = 0.4 \; \rm kg.

The two balls stick to each other after the collision. In other words, this collision is a perfectly inelastic collision. Kinetic energy will not be conserved. The velocity of the two balls after the collision can only be found using the conservation of momentum.

Assume that the system of the two balls is isolated. Thus, the sum of the momentum of the two balls will stay the same before and after the collision.

The momentum of an object of mass m and velocity v is: p = m \cdot v.

Momentum of the two balls before collision:

  • First ball: p = m \cdot v = 0.1\; \rm kg \times 100\; \rm m \cdot s^{-1} = 10\; \rm kg \cdot m \cdot s^{-1}.
  • Second ball: p = m \cdot v = 0.4\; \rm kg \times 50\; \rm m \cdot s^{-1} = 20\; \rm kg \cdot m \cdot s^{-1}.
  • Sum: 10\; \rm kg \cdot m \cdot s^{-1} + 20 \; \rm kg \cdot m \cdot s^{-1} = 30 \; \rm kg \cdot m \cdot s^{-1} given that the two balls are moving in the same direction.

Based on the assumptions, the sum of the momentum of the two balls after collision should also be 30\; \rm kg \cdot m \cdot s^{-1}. The mass of the two balls, combined, is 0.1\; \rm kg + 0.4\; \rm kg = 0.5\; \rm kg. Let the velocity of the two balls after the collision v\; \rm m \cdot s^{-1}. (There's only one velocity because the collision had sticked the two balls to each other.)

  • Momentum after the collision from p = m \cdot v: (0.5\, v)\; \rm kg \cdot m \cdot s^{-1.
  • Momentum after the collision from the conservation of momentum: 30\; \rm kg \cdot m \cdot s^{-1}.

These two values are supposed to describe the same quantity: the sum of the momentum of the two balls after the collision. They should be equal to each other. That gives the equation about v:

0.5\, v = 30.

v = 60.

In other words, the velocity of the two balls right after the collision should be 60\; \rm m \cdot s^{-1}.

<h3>Kinetic Energy</h3>

The kinetic energy of an object of mass m and velocity v is \displaystyle \frac{1}{2}\, m \cdot v^{2}.

Kinetic energy before the collision:

  • First ball: \displaystyle \frac{1}{2} \, m \cdot v^2 = \frac{1}{2}\times 0.1\; \rm kg \times \left(100\; \rm m \cdot s^{-1}\right)^{2} = 500\; \rm J.
  • Second ball: \displaystyle \frac{1}{2} \, m \cdot v^2 = \frac{1}{2}\times 0.4\; \rm kg \times \left(50\; \rm m \cdot s^{-1}\right)^{2} = 500\; \rm J.
  • Sum: 500\; \rm J + 500\; \rm J = 1000\; \rm J.

The two balls stick to each other after the collision. Therefore, consider them as a single object when calculating the sum of their kinetic energies.

  • Mass of the two balls, combined: 0.5\; \rm kg.
  • Velocity of the two balls right after the collision: 60\; \rm m\cdot s^{-1}.

Sum of the kinetic energies of the two balls right after the collision:

\displaystyle \frac{1}{2} \, m \cdot v^{2} = \frac{1}{2}\times 0.5\; \rm kg \times \left(60\; \rm m \cdot s^{-1}\right)^2 = 900\; \rm J.

Therefore, 1000\; \rm J - 900\; \rm J = 100\; \rm J of kinetic energy would be lost during this collision.

7 0
4 years ago
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