Uniform Circular Motion (UCM)
... Centripetal forces are provided by real forces acting on the object. (FT, Ff, FN, Fg) (The actual force acting on the object that causes it to change direction.) ...
... Centripetal forces are provided by real forces acting on the object. (FT, Ff, FN, Fg) (The actual force acting on the object that causes it to change direction.) ...
Student notes Chap 1 & 2
... Amount of ______ occupied by an object - volume • To find volume of a ______ ______ (such as a brick) • Measure its length, _______, & height • Then multiply the ____ numbers & their units together ( V = 1 x w x h) • (For a brick) measurements probably would be in ...
... Amount of ______ occupied by an object - volume • To find volume of a ______ ______ (such as a brick) • Measure its length, _______, & height • Then multiply the ____ numbers & their units together ( V = 1 x w x h) • (For a brick) measurements probably would be in ...
act04
... 12. For m1, m2, and m3, perform the following analysis steps: (1) identify the forces acting on each, (2) choose a coordinate system for each, (3) draw a free-body diagram for each showing the coordinate system and the direction it will accelerate, (4) determine whether each force is positive or neg ...
... 12. For m1, m2, and m3, perform the following analysis steps: (1) identify the forces acting on each, (2) choose a coordinate system for each, (3) draw a free-body diagram for each showing the coordinate system and the direction it will accelerate, (4) determine whether each force is positive or neg ...
Circular Motion/Gravity Class Notes
... diagram best represents the directions of both the car’s velocity, v, and acceleration, a? ...
... diagram best represents the directions of both the car’s velocity, v, and acceleration, a? ...
p - Chris Hecker
... Derivatives are Linear • the key insight of calculus: the change is so small that you can ignore it anytime it’s multiplied by itself...so, you can treat any continuous function as linear if you’re zoomed in far enough (to 1st order) – “continuity” keeps us from dividing by zero – normalization mak ...
... Derivatives are Linear • the key insight of calculus: the change is so small that you can ignore it anytime it’s multiplied by itself...so, you can treat any continuous function as linear if you’re zoomed in far enough (to 1st order) – “continuity” keeps us from dividing by zero – normalization mak ...
Review Game - SCHOOLinSITES
... Which of the following statements is correct? a. The farther the force is from the axis of rotation, the more torque is produced. b. The closer the force is to the axis of rotation, the more torque is produced. c. The closer the force is to the axis of rotation, the easier it is to rotate the object ...
... Which of the following statements is correct? a. The farther the force is from the axis of rotation, the more torque is produced. b. The closer the force is to the axis of rotation, the more torque is produced. c. The closer the force is to the axis of rotation, the easier it is to rotate the object ...
Chapters Two and Three
... “The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force acting on it and inversely proportional to the mass of the object” Weight is a force F = ma ...
... “The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force acting on it and inversely proportional to the mass of the object” Weight is a force F = ma ...
Lecture-VII
... An empty coal car of mass m0 starts from rest under an applied force of magnitude F . At the same time coal begins to run into the car at a steady rate b from a coal hopper at rest along the track. Find the speed when a mass mc of coal has been transferred. Because the falling coal does not have any ...
... An empty coal car of mass m0 starts from rest under an applied force of magnitude F . At the same time coal begins to run into the car at a steady rate b from a coal hopper at rest along the track. Find the speed when a mass mc of coal has been transferred. Because the falling coal does not have any ...