The answer is the Second one
I think its [B]
Personally i would say [B] only because If you are looking beyond the car in front of you..... then what if the car in front of you throws on breaks... you would hit them in the butt because you weren't paying attention to the car.
And majority of the time if your looking in the lanes beside you then you are most likely trying to get in that lane.
<span>3.92 m/s^2
Assuming that the local gravitational acceleration is 9.8 m/s^2, then the maximum acceleration that the truck can have is the coefficient of static friction multiplied by the local gravitational acceleration, so
0.4 * 9.8 m/s^2 = 3.92 m/s^2
If you want the more complicated answer, the normal force that the crate exerts is it's mass times the local gravitational acceleration, so
20.0 kg * 9.8 m/s^2 = 196 kg*m/s^2 = 196 N
Multiply by the coefficient of static friction, giving
196 N * 0.4 = 78.4 N
So we need to apply 78.4 N of force to start the crate moving. Let's divide by the crate's mass
78.4 N / 20.0 kg
= 78.4 kg*m/s^2 / 20.0 kg
= 3.92 m/s^2
And you get the same result.</span>
Answer:
people grow by the year sometimes it even by months
<span>There is six horizen.
1. O Horizon - The top, organic layer of soil,
2. A Horizon - The layer called topsoil;
3. E Horizon - This layer is beneath the A Horizon and above the
B Horizon. It is made up mostly of sand.
4. B Horizon - Also called the subsoil - this layer is beneath the E
Horizon and above the C Horizon.
5. C Horizon - it's called regolith: the layer beneath the B Horizon
and above the R Horizon.
6 R Horizon - this is last and the unweathered rock layer that is
beneath all the other layers.</span>