"The organ proved to be a vital part of the body's metabolism" "The tissue was damaged from the scalpel but would heal" "The function of the heart is to pump blood"
Yes. Think of block sitting on top of a bigger block. If the bottom block moves, it will drag the top block with it. Since the force of friction on the small block and its displacement are in the same direction, the "work" is positive. The static friction is a passive force, It is not a source of energy; it transmits the force placed on the bottom block. (And the "work" done by the friction on the bottom block is exactly the negative of the work done on the top block.)
True,when you <span>turn the </span>volume<span> up on your television </span><span>, you're actually turning up the </span>amplitude<span>!</span>
Answer:
<em>Timing Belts </em>are components of internal combustion engines sinchronizing the handles and cranks rotation with the camshaft when operating its valves.
Internal combustion systems such as the ones found in cars for example, need a method to get the heat away from the system; the mechanical device set for that purpose is the <em>water pump</em>, which pushes coolant over the radiator, the hoses and engine block; that <em>water pump </em>is generally joint with the crankshaft pulley through those <em>timing belts</em>. Thereyby (A.)
Explanation:
Yes, the volume of the cylinder will remain constant. As the radius decreases, the height will increase to make sure that the volume is kept the same.
We have been given a value of dr/dt and are required to find dh/dt
Because the volume is constant, we can plug it into the formula for the volume of the cylinder and rearrange it to make h the subject:
128 = πr²h
h = 128/πr²
Now we differentiate both sides:
dh/dr = -256/πr³
Applying the chain rule:
dh/dt = dh/dr x dr/dt
dh/dt = (-256/πr³) x -0.05
dh/dt = 64/5πr³; substituting the value of r
dh/dt = 64/5π(1.5)³
dh/dt = 1.21 in/sec