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iren [92.7K]
3 years ago
14

If you could help me please.

Physics
1 answer:
11Alexandr11 [23.1K]3 years ago
8 0

1) Does a 1 kg object weight 9.8 newtons on the moon? why?

<em>No.</em> 1kg of mass does not weigh 9.8N on the moon.

Weight = (mass) x (gravity).

Gravity is 9.8 m/s² on Earth, but<em> gravity is only 1.62 m/s² on the moon</em>.

2) How much does a 3-kg object weigh (on earth) in newtons?

Weight = (mass) x (gravity)

Gravity = 9.8 m/s² on Earth.

Weight = (3 kg) x (9.8 m/s² )

<em>Weight = 29.4 N</em>

3) How much does a 20-kg object weigh (on earth) in newton?

Weight = (mass) x (gravity)

Gravity = 9.8 m/s² on Earth.

Weight = (20 kg) x (9.8 m/s² )

<em>Weight = 196 N</em>

4) What must happen for the mass of an object to change?

When an object moves, its mass increases.  The faster it moves, the greater its mass gets.  But this is all part of Einstein's "Relativity".  The object has to move at a significant fraction of the speed of light before any change can be noticed or measured.  So as far as we are concerned, in everyday life, <em>the mass of an object doesn't change</em>, no matter where it is, or what you do to it.

5) What are 2 ways the weight of an object can change?

First, remember that the mass of an object doesn't change, no matter where it is, what you do to it, or what else is around it.

But its weight can change, because its weight depends on the strength of gravity in the place where the object is, and that gravity is the result of what else is around it in the neighborhood.  So the weight can change even though the mass doesn't.

The weight of an object changes if you take it to a place where gravity is stronger or weaker.

Let's say we have an object whose mass is 90.72 kilograms.  Like me !    

As long as I stay on earth, where gravity is 9.8 m/s² , I weigh 889 Newtons  (200 pounds).

. . . Fly me to the moon. Gravity = 1.62 m/s²  Weight = 147 Newtons (33 lbs)

. . . Drag me to Jupiter.  Gravity = 24.8 m/s²  Weight = 2,249 N (506 pounds)

My mass never changed, but my weight sure did.

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A fly flaps its wings back and forth 25 times in one second. The period of wing flapping is _____.
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Answer:

<h2>The period is 0.04 sec</h2>

Explanation:

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What is the period of oscillation?

This can be defined as the time taken to complete one full revolution or oscillation.

given that the  fly flaps its wings back and forth 25 times in one second. then the frequency is 25 Hz

we know that period T= 1/F

T= 1/25

T=0.04 sec

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A long wire is known to have a radius greater than 4.0 mm and to carry a current uniformly distributed over its cross section. i
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Magnetic field due to long wire inside wire at any point

B = \frac{u_o i r}{2 \pi R^2}

Now the ratio of two magnetic field is given by

\frac{B_{in}}{B_{out}} = \frac{r_1/R^2}{1/r_2}

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Along some shorelines, incoming waves cause the water to simply rise and fall rather that form a surf zone. What does this tell
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Answer:

Explained

Explanation:

Along some shorelines, incoming waves cause the water to simply rise and fall and not form surfs because of the steepness of the shorelines. Long period waves wont form surfs at steep shores because of the breaking and unstability of waves. Wave breaks at the shallow waters. The breaking of the waves depends upon H/L ratio.

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What is the mass of a sample of water that takes 2000 kJ of energy to boil into steam at 373 K? The latent heat of vaporization
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Answer : The mass of a sample of water is, 888.89 grams

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q=L\times m

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q = heat = 2000 kJ = 2\times 10^6J       (1 kJ = 1000 J)

L = latent heat of vaporization of water = 2.25\times 10^6J/kg

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Now put all the given values in the above formula, we get:

2\times 10^6J=(2.25\times 10^6J/kg)\times m

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Therefore, the mass of a sample of water is, 888.89 grams

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