Answer:
The solution(s) are in order with respect to the attachments
Joules ; 5. Adding the same amount of heat to two different objects will produce the same increase in temperature ; 2. Same speed in both ; 2. A
Explanation:
Diagram 1 ( Liquid Nitrogen ) : So as you can see, we want our units in Joules here, and can therefore multiply the mass of gaseous nitrogen and the latent heat of liquid nitrogen, to cancel the units kg, and receive our solution - in terms of Joules. Let's do it.
q ( energy removed ) = mass of nitrogen
latent heat of liquid nitrogen,
q = 1.3 kg
2.01
10⁵ J / kg =
=
=
=
Joules =
kiloJoules = 2.613
10⁵Joules is the energy that must be removed
Diagram 2 : The same amount of heat does not necessarily mean the same increase in temperature for two different objects. The increase in temperature depends on the specific heat capacity of the substance. Therefore your solution is 5 ) Adding the same amount of heat to two different objects will produce the same increase in temperature.
Diagram 3 : The temperatures in both glasses are the same, and hence the molecules have the same average speed. Therefore your solution is 2 ) Same speed in both.
Diagram 4 : Glass A has more water molecules, and hence has more thermal energy. Your solution is 2 ) A.
Answer: v = 4.4 m/s
Explanation:
In the absence of friction, the total mechanical energy will be constant
KE₀ + PE₀ = KE₁ + PE₁
0 + mg(6) = ½mv₁² + mg(5)
½mv₁² = mg(6 - 5)
v = √(2g(1)) = 4.4 m/s
Distance covered is given as follows
1). 7 km North
2). 5 km North
3). 1 km East
Now total distance covered will be given as
Now in order to find the displacement we will show all with their directions
towards North
towards East
So total displacement is
so net displacement will be
so displacement is 12.04 km
Answer:
Winds tend to rotate in a counter clockwise direction in the center of northern and southern hemisphere.
Explanation:
The wind blows clockwise around a high pressure area in the northern hemisphere and the wind blows counter - clockwise around low pressure.
In the northern hemisphere High-pressure systems rotate clockwise direction and in the southern hemisphere low-pressure systems rotate clockwise direction.