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Korvikt [17]
4 years ago
10

In metal wires the charged particles that move are A. protons B. electrons C. neutrons D. none of the above

Physics
2 answers:
VashaNatasha [74]4 years ago
4 0

Answer:

the answer is B: electrons

Explanation:

OLEGan [10]4 years ago
4 0

Answer:

c

Explanation:

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Spring compressed 10cm by 100N force and held in place with Pin. Pin is pulled and block is pushed Up the incline. Uk(coefficien
otez555 [7]

The compression of 10 cm by a 100 N force on the plane that has a

coefficient of friction of 0.39 give the following values.

  • The velocity of the block after the Spring extends 7 cm is approximately 1.73 m/s
  • The height at which the block stops rising is approximately 1.1415 m
  • The length of the incline is approximately 1.536 m

<h3>How can the velocity and height of the block be calculated?</h3>

Mass of the block, m = 3 kg

Spring \ constant, K = \dfrac{100 \, N}{0.1 \, m}  = \mathbf{ 1000\, N/m}

Coefficient of kinetic friction, \mu_k = 0.39

Therefore, we have;

Friction force = \mathbf{\mu_k}·m·g·cos(θ)

Which gives;

Friction force = 0.39 × 3 × 9.81 × cos(48°) ≈ 7.68

Work done by the motion of the block, <em>W</em> ≈ 7.68 × d

The work done = The kinetic energy of the block, which gives;

\mathbf{\dfrac{1}{2} \times k \cdot x^2 }= 7.68 \cdot d

The initial kinetic energy in the spring is found as follows;

K.E. = 0.5 × 1000 N/m × (0.1 m)² = 5 J

The initial velocity of the block is therefore;

5 = 0.5·m·v²

v₁ = √(2 × 5 ÷ 3) ≈ 1.83

Work done by the motion of the block, <em>W</em> ≈ 7.68 N × 0.07 m ≈ 0.5376 J

Chane in kinetic energy, ΔK.E. = Work done

ΔK.E. = 0.5 × 3 × (v₁² - v₂²)

Which gives;

ΔK.E. = 0.5 × 3 × (1.83² - v₂²) = 0.5376

Which gives;

  • The velocity of the block after the Spring extends 7 cm, v₂ ≈ <u>1.73 m/s</u>

The height at which the block will stop moving, <em>h</em>, is given as follows;

At \ the \ maximum \ height, \ h, \ we \ have ; \  \dfrac{1}{2} \times 1000 \times 0.1^2 = 7.68 \times x

Which gives;

Length \ of \ the \ incline \ at \ maximum \ height, \ x_{max} =\dfrac{  7.68 }{ \dfrac{1}{2} \times 1000 \times 0.1^2  } \approx 1.536

The distance up the inclined, the block rises, at maximum height is therefore;

x_{max} ≈ 1.536 m

Therefore;

h = 1.536 × sin(48°) ≈ 1.1415

  • The height at which the block stops rising, h ≈ <u>1.1415 m</u>

From the above solution for the height, the length of the incline is he

distance along the incline at maximum height which is therefore;

  • Length of the incline, x_{max} = 1.536 m

Learn more about conservation of energy here:

brainly.com/question/7538238

5 0
2 years ago
One major difference between plant and animal cells is that plant cells are the only ones with ?
sineoko [7]
Plant cells have a cell wall.
8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
If force and displacement are in opposite directions, will work be positive or negative?
eimsori [14]
It would be negative regardless of what you define as a positive direction.
8 0
3 years ago
This question is related to inertia:
luda_lava [24]
The way I do it is suddenly, in the same sort of way that magicians try to pull a table cloth off a table when there's things on the table cloth.The sudden approach acts as an impulse of force and starts to accelerate the roll. But, the piece (assuming it has perforations) is off the roll before the roll can move, due to inertia. Then the roll will acclerate, move, slow down and stop. However, in accelerating, the roll will unravel. The bigger the impulse the more it will unravel.+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++If on the other hand, the piece of paper is held firmly, and the roll is pulled, then the impulse is presumably given to the paper and the hand whose inertia is a lot more than that of the roll. So, I think I'd actually go for choice c)+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++This assumes that the roll is free to rotate.I think that a similar idea is behind the design and use of a "ballistic galvanometer". The charge is passed through the galvanometer quickly, as a current pulse. Then the needle starts to deflect, and the deflection is arranged to depend on the total charge that has passed through in the time of the current pulse.
3 0
3 years ago
If you have two uncertainties, and they are from two different sources and contribute to the uncertainty of a measurement, what
Darya [45]

The propagation errors we can find the uncertainty of a given magnitude is the sum of the uncertainties of each magnitude.

                           Δm = ∑  | \frac{dm}{dx_i} | \ \Delta x_i

Physical quantities are precise values ​​of a variable, but all measurements have an uncertainty, in the case of direct measurements the uncertainty is equal to the precision of the given instrument.

When you have derived variables, that is, when measurements are made with different instruments, each with a different uncertainty, the way to find the uncertainty or error is used the propagation errors to use the variation of each parameter, keeping the others constant and taking the worst of the  cases, all the errors add up.

If m is the calculated quantity, x_i the measured values ​​and Δx_i the uncertainty of each value, the total uncertainty is

                      Δm = ∑  | \frac{dm}{dx_i } | \ \Delta x_i    | dm / dx_i | Dx_i

               

for instance:

If the magnitude is  a average of two magnitudes measured each with a different error

                     m = \frac{m_1+m_2}{2}

                     Δm = | \frac{dm}{dx_1} |  Δx₁ + | \frac{dm}{dx_2} | Δx₂

                     \frac{dm}{dx_1} = ½

                     \frac{dm}{dx_2} = ½

                     Δm = \frac{1}{2} Δx₁ + ½ Δx₂

                     Δm = Δx₁ + Δx₂

In conclusion, using the propagation errors we can find the uncertainty of a given quantity is the sum of the uncertainties of each measured quantity.

Learn more about propagation errors here:

brainly.com/question/17175455

6 0
3 years ago
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