Answer:
the action of measuring something.
Measurement is a comparison of an unknown quantity with a known fixed quantity of the same kind. The value obtained on measuring a quantity is called its magnitude. Magnitude of a quantity is expressed as numbers in its units.
Answer:
m = 4.4 × 10³ kg
Explanation:
Given that:
The total yearly energy is 4.0 × 10²⁰ J
The amount of mass that provides this energy can be determined by using the formula:
E = mc²
where;
c = speed of light in free space = (3 × 10⁸)
4.0 × 10²⁰ = m × (3 × 10⁸)²

m = 4.4 × 10³ kg
I think the question should be the below:
<span>What is the total distance, side to side, that the top of the building moves during such an oscillation?
</span>
Answer is the below:
<span>Acceleration .. a = (-) ω² x </span>
<span>(ω = equivalent ang. vel. = 2π.f) (x = displacement from equilibrium position) </span>
<span>x (max) = a(max) /ω² </span>
<span>x = (0.015 x 9.8m/s²) / (2π.f)² .. .. (0.147) / (2π*0.22)² .. .. ►x(max) = 0.077m .. (7.70cm)</span>
Well, first of all, there's no such thing as "fully charged" for a capacitor.
A capacitor has a "maximum working voltage", because of mechanical
or chemical reasons, just like a car has a maximum safe speed. But
anywhere below that, cars and capacitors do their jobs just fine, without
any risk of failing.
So we have a capacitor that has some charge on it, and therefore some
voltage across it. From the list of choices above . . .
<span>-- Both plates have the same amount of charge.
Yes. And both plates have opposite TYPES of charge.
One plate is loaded with electrons and is negatively charged.
The other plate is missing electrons and is positively charged.
-- There is a potential difference between the plates.
Yes. That's the "voltage" mentioned earlier.
It's a measure of how badly the extra electrons want to jump
from the negative plate to the positive plate.
-- Electric potential energy is stored.
Yes. It's the energy that had to be put into the capacitor
to move electrons away from one plate and cram them
onto the other plate.
</span>