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Mamont248 [21]
3 years ago
13

A 5.0 kg medicine ball and a 7.0 kg medicine ball are the same size and shape. If you were in outer space, how would you determi

ne which ball had which mass?
Physics
1 answer:
Scrat [10]3 years ago
5 0
Answer:
The objects can be distinguished by their weight instead of by mass.

Explanation
Because mass is constant, the two objects cannot be distinguished by mass.

However, gravitational acceleration varies in outer space. Therefore the heavier mass will register a higher reading on a weighing scale.

Note that an object of mass M weighs Mg, where g =  acceleration due to gravity.
You might be interested in
A particle that has an 7.3-μC charge moves with a velocity of magnitude 4 × 105 m/s along the +x axis. It experiences no magneti
vovangra [49]

If the particle's velocity were perpendicular to the magnetic field, the magnetic force would be given by:

F = qvB

F is the magnetic force, q is the charge, v is the velocity, and B is the magnetic field strength.

Given values:

F = 0.320N

q = 7.3×10⁻⁶C

v = 4×10⁵m/s

Plug in the values and solve for B:

0.320 = (7.3×10⁻⁶)(4×10⁵)B

B = 0.110T

The magnetic force depends on the cross product between the particle's velocity vector v and the magnetic field vector B. If v and B are parallel then the cross product is 0. v points in the +x direction, therefore B must point in either the +x or -x direction.

5 0
3 years ago
1. Use Coulomb’s Law (equation below) to calculate the approximate force felt by an electron at point A in the schematic below.
Amiraneli [1.4K]

Answer:

Explanation:

From the data it appears that A is the middle point between two charges.

First of all we shall calculate the field at point A .

Field due to charge -Q ( 6e⁻ ) at A

= 9 x 10⁹ x 6 x 1.6 x 10⁻¹⁹ / (2.5)² x 10⁻⁴

= 13.82 x 10⁻⁶ N/C

Its direction will be towards Q⁻

Same field will be produced by Q⁺ charge . The direction will be away

from Q⁺  towards Q⁻ .

We shall add the field  to get the resultant field  .

= 2 x 13.82 x 10⁻⁶

= 27.64 x 10⁻⁶ N/C

Force on electron put at A

= charge x field

= 1.6 x 10⁻¹⁹ x 27.64 x 10⁻⁶

= 44.22 x 10⁻²⁵ N

8 0
4 years ago
Light of wavelength 675 nm passes
Anna [14]

Answer:

44

Explanation:

5 0
3 years ago
An object is allowed to fall freely near the surface of a planet. The object has an acceleration due to gravity of 24 m/s2. How
Alborosie

Answer:

12 m

Explanation:

The object is in uniformly accelerated motion, so the distance covered can be found using the following suvat equation:

s=ut+\frac{1}{2}at^2

where

s is the distance

u is the initial velocity

t is the time

a is the acceleration

For this problem,

g=24 m/s^2

and

u = 0, since we are considering the first second of motion

So, substituting t = 1 s, we find

s=0+\frac{1}{2}(24)(1)^2=12 m

6 0
4 years ago
A ball is dropped from rest at a point 12 m above the ground into a smooth, frictionless chute. The ball exits the chute 2 m abo
Nonamiya [84]

Answer:

29,7 m

Explanation:

We need to devide the problem in two parts:

A)  Energy

B) MRUV

<u>Energy:</u>

Since no friction between pint (1) and (2), then the energy conservatets:

Energy = constant ----> Ek(cinética) + Ep(potencial) = constant

Ek1 + Ep1 = Ek2 + Ep2

Ek1 = 0  ; because V1 is zero (the ball is "dropped")

Ep1 = m*g*H1

Ep2= m*g*H2

Then:

Ek2  = m*g*(H1-H2)

By definition of cinetic energy:

m*(V2)²/2 = m*g*(H1-H2) --->  V2 = \sqrt{(2*g*(H1-H2)}

Replaced values:  V2 = 14,0 m/s

<u>MRUV:</u>

The decomposition of the velocity (V2), gives a for the horizontal component:

V2x = V2*cos(α)

Then the traveled distance is:

X = V2*cos(α)*t.... but what time?

The time what takes the ball hit the ground.

Since: Y3 - Y2 = V2*t + (1/2)*(-g)*t²

In the vertical  axis:

Y3 = 0 ; Y2 = H2 = 2 m

Reeplacing:

-2 = 14*t + (1/2)*(-9,81)*t²

solving the ecuation, the only positive solution is:

t = 2,99 sec ≈ 3 sec

Then, for the distance:

X = V2*cos(α)*t = (14 m/s)*(cos45°)*(3sec) ≈ 29,7 m

6 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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