Answer:
Hover for more information. Kurt Vonnegut arguably wrote his story titled “Harrison Bergeron” for a number of reasons, including the following: Vonnegut may have wanted to appeal to readers' interests in prophecies about the future. Thus, the very first words of the story are “The year was 2081.”
The options to the question asked are listed below
A)The voltage across both the resistor and the capacitor is zero.
B)The voltage across the resistor is zero, and the voltage across the capacitor is equal to the terminal voltage of the battery.
C)The voltage across both the resistor and the capacitor is equal to the terminal voltage of the battery.
D)The voltage across the resistor is equal to the terminal voltage of the battery, and the voltage across the capacitor is zero.
E)The voltage across both the resistor and the capacitor is equal to one-half of the terminal voltage of the battery.
Answer:
D. The voltage across the resistor is equal to the terminal voltage of the battery, and the voltage across the capacitor is zero.
Explanation:
As soon as the switch is closed, the capacitor starts to charge through the resistor. At the moment the switch is closed, the voltage across the resistor equals the terminal voltage and the voltage across the capacitor equals zero. As the time, t increases, the capacitor begins to get charged and the voltage across it increases based on the formula
Vc=Vt (1-e^(-t/Rc)) where Vt is the terminal voltage and Vc is the voltage across the capacitor.
I believe the correct answer is C. inverted.
The natural order in an English sentence would require that the verb follows the subject. However, sometimes, for stylistic purposes, we have the reversed order: the verb comes before the subject, as in: All before him was blank darkness (the verb is bold). The natural order of this sentence would be: Blank darkness was all before him.
Tom Godwin's chosen title for his short story "The Cold Equations" refers to the cold, factual mathematical equations that were used to calculate Marilyn's fate.The first equation refers to the one the computers that govern the Stardustcruiser and the Emergency Dispatch Ships (EDS) use to calculate how much fuel to load Barton's EDS with so that he will safely arrive on Wooden to fulfill his emergency mission. The conflict of the story...