<h3>Answer</h3>
6.6 N pointing to the right
<h3>Explanation</h3>
Given that,
two forces acting of magnitude 3.6N
angle between them = 48°
To find,
the third force that will cause the object to be in equilibrium
<h3>1)</h3>
Find the vertical and horizontal components of the two forces
vertical force1 = sin(24)(3.6)
vertical force2= -sin(24)(3.6)
<em>(negative sign since it is acting on opposite direction)</em>
vertical force3 = sin(24)(3.6) - sin(24)(3.6)
= 0
<h3>2)</h3>
horizontal force1 = cos(24)(3.6)
horizontal force2= cos(24)(3.6)
horizontal force3 = cos(24)(3.6) + cos(24)(3.6)
= 2(cos(24)(3.6))
= 6.5775 N
≈ 6.6 N
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The gravitational energy is going up subtracting the energy that was on the ground
Well, Harry, what you said is not necessarily true the way you said it.
But we know what you mean, and what you meant to say is true.
The Doppler effect is observed if there is relative radial motion
between an object and an observer <em><u>AND</u></em> if the object happens
to be putting out sound or light in the observer's direction.
Your question kind of petered out there towards the end and you didn't specify
the terms, so I'll pick my own.
The "Hubble Constant" hasn't yet been pinned down precisely, so let's pick a
round number that's in the neighborhood of the last 20 years of measurements:
<em>70 km per second per megaparsec</em>.
We'll also need to know that 1 parsec = about 3.262 light years.
So the speed of your receding galaxy is
(Distance in LY) x (1 megaparsec / 3,262,000 LY) x (70 km/sec-mpsc) =
(150 million) x (1 / 3,262,000) x (70 km/sec) =
<em>3,219 km/sec </em>in the direction away from us (rounded)
Answer:
D.
Explanation:
Red light has wavelengths around 620 to 750 nm.