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antiseptic1488 [7]
3 years ago
15

“Will the real atomic model please stand up?,” why did J.J. Thomson experiment with cathode ray tubes?

Physics
2 answers:
Alex777 [14]3 years ago
8 0
To determine that electric beams in cathode ray tubes were actually made of particles. 

It will help you :)
mina [271]3 years ago
3 0
To determine that electric beams in cathode ray tubes were actually made of particles 
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The universe could be considered an isolated system because
cricket20 [7]
a) many people think that no energy or matter exists outside the universe. 

An isolated system is defined as a system that does not interact with its surroundings. This is the reason that its total energy and mass remains constant. Moreover, t<span>otal</span><span> momentum in a system is conserved for collisions occurring in </span><span>isolated systems.</span>
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Many years ago, there was a famous case of a boy born with severe combined immune deficiency (SCID). His physicians placed him i
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What have helped this boy is doing more treatments scud
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3 years ago
Which of the following best explains how earth is heated through radiation
lawyer [7]

Answer:

The sun touches earth during daytime and the suns rays heat our earth giving us heat. The sun heating the earth is also considered radiation.

Explanation:

6 0
3 years ago
A man stands on the roof of a 15.0-m-tall building and throws a rock with a speed of 30.0 m&gt;s at an angle of 33.0%1b above th
Brilliant_brown [7]
The motion described here is a projectile motion which is characterized by an arc-shaped direction of motion. There are already derived equations for this type of motions as listed:

Hmax = v₀²sin²θ/2g
t = 2v₀sinθ/g
y = xtanθ + gx²/(2v₀²cos²θ)

where

Hmax = max. height reached by the object in a projectile motion
θ=angle of inclination
v₀= initial velocity
t = time of flight
x = horizontal range
y = vertical height

Part A. 

Hmax = v₀²sin²θ/2g = (30²)(sin 33°)²/2(9.81)
Hmax = 13.61 m

Part B. In this part, we solve the velocity when it almost reaches the ground. Approximately, this is equal to y = 28.61 m and x = 31.91 m. In projectile motion, it is important to note that there are two component vectors of motion: the vertical and horizontal components. In the horizontal component, the motion is in constant speed or zero acceleration. On the other hand, the vertical component is acting under constant acceleration. So, we use the two equations of rectilinear motion:

y = v₀t + 1/2 at²
28.61 = 30(t) + 1/2 (9.81)(t²)
t = 0.839 seconds

a = (v₁-v₀)/t
9.81 = (v₁ - 30)/0.839
v₁ = 38.23 m/s

Part C. 
y = xtanθ + gx²/(2v₀²cos²θ)
Hmax + 15 = xtanθ + gx²/(2v₀²cos²θ)
13.61 + 15 = xtan33° + (9.81)x²/[2(30)²(cos33°)²]
Solving using a scientific calculator,
x = 31.91 m

3 0
3 years ago
A missile is moving 1350 m/s at 25.0° angle. It needs to hit in a 55.0° direction in 10.20 s. What is the direction of its final
77julia77 [94]

Answer:

final velocity = 3504 m/s  

Explanation:

<em>Given data:</em>

velocity of missile = Vi = 1350m/s

angle at which missile is moving = 25degree

distance between missile and targets = 23500m

angle between target and missile=55degree

time=10.2s

<em>To find:</em>

Final velocity: ?

<em>Formula:</em>

x = Vx*t + ½*ax*t²  

Let x be the horizontal component of distance

x = ertical component of distance

t-time

ax = horizontal component of acceleration

ay = Vertical component of acceleration

Vx = horizontal component of velocity

Vy = Vertical component of velocity

<em>Solution:</em>

x = Vx*t + ½*ax*t²

23500m * cos55.0º = 1350m/s * cos25.0º * 10.20s + ½ * ax * (10.20s)²  

ax = 19.2 m/s²  

V'x = Vx + ax*t = 1350m/s * cos25.0º + 19.2m/s² * 10.20s = 1419 m/s  

<em>similarly vertically:</em>

y = Vy*t + ½*ay*t² 

23500m * sin55.0º = 1350m/s * sin25.0º * 10.20s + ½ * ay * (10.20s)²  

ay = 258 m/s²  

V'y = Vy + ay*t

     = 1350m/s * sin25.0º + 258m/s² * 10.20s = 3204 m/s  

V = √(V'x² + V'y²)

   = 3504 m/s  

8 0
3 years ago
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