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Mice21 [21]
3 years ago
6

How do fission nuclear reactions differ from fusion nuclear reactions?A. Fission reactions involve the conversion of matter int

o energy, but fusion reactions do not. B.Fusion reactions involve the conversion of matter into energy, but fission reactions do not. C.Fission reactions are used to generate electricity for consumers, but fusion reactions are not. D. Fusion reactions are used to generate electricity for consumers, but fission reactions are not.
Physics
2 answers:
svetoff [14.1K]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

The correct answer is c. Fission reactions are used to generate electricity for consumers, but fusion reactions are not.

Explanation:

I just took the quiz ;)

stiv31 [10]3 years ago
5 0

Fission reactions are used to generate electricity for consumers, but fusion reactions are not.  (C).  They COULD be, but we haven't developed technology yet that can control a fusion reaction well enough to use it for anything productive.  So far, we're not able to use fusion reactions for anything cleaner or gentler than bombs.

It's like the "Universal Solvent" ... a make-believe substance that can dissolve ANY other substance.  It would have no practical value, and it would be completely useless to us ... There would be nothing that we could KEEP IT in.

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Help me with this review question please.
QveST [7]

Answer:

K E=( mv²)/2

=(60×3.5²)/2

=367.5J

6 0
3 years ago
During takeoff, an airplane climbs with a speed of 195 m/s at an angle of 15° above the horizontal. The speed and angle constitu
matrenka [14]

Answer:

The horizontal component of the velocity is 188 m/s

The vertical component of the velocity is 50 m/s.

Explanation:

Hi there!

Please, see the figure for a graphic description of the problem. Notice that the x-component of the vector velocity (vx), the y-component (vy) and the vector velocity form a right triangle. Then, we can use trigonometry to obtain the magnitude of vx and vy:

We can find vx using the following trigonometric rule of a right triangle:

cos α = adjacent / hypotenuse

cos 15° = vx / 195 m/s

195 m/s · cos 15° = vx

vx = 188 m/s

The horizontal component of the velocity is 188 m/s

To calculate the y-component we will use the following trigonometric rule:

sin α = opposite / hypotenuse

sin 15° = vy / 195 m/s

195 m/s · sin 15° = vy

vy = 50 m/s

The vertical component of the velocity is 50 m/s.

4 0
3 years ago
Here is a graph of speed vs time. If the object is moving to the east, which BEST describes the speed and velocity of the graph?
Artemon [7]

Answer:

Both speed and velocity are changing.

Explanation:

They are both going up so both are changing

5 0
3 years ago
If the mass of the moon is ...
bulgar [2K]
C decreased the factor cuz the max is smaller
8 0
3 years ago
A high jumper jumps over a bar that is 2 m above the mat. With what velocity does the jumper strike the mat in the landing area?
docker41 [41]

Answer:

The velocity with which the jumper strike the mat in the landing area is 6.26 m/s.

Explanation:

It is given that,

A high jumper jumps over a bar that is 2 m above the mat, h = 2 m

We need to find the velocity with which the jumper strike the mat in the landing area. It is a case of conservation of energy. let v is the velocity. it is given by :

v=\sqrt{2gh}

g is acceleration due to gravity

v=\sqrt{2\times 9.81\ m/s^2\times 2\ m}

v = 6.26 m/s

So, the velocity with which the jumper strike the mat in the landing area is 6.26 m/s. Hence, this is the required solution.

8 0
4 years ago
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