Online Education and Outreach
... There are many forces at work shaping the world as we know it. A force is defined as a push or a pull on an object, causing a change in its motion. Forces can be balanced, resulting in no movement at all. If one force is stronger than another, there is a change in motion.This constant push and pull ...
... There are many forces at work shaping the world as we know it. A force is defined as a push or a pull on an object, causing a change in its motion. Forces can be balanced, resulting in no movement at all. If one force is stronger than another, there is a change in motion.This constant push and pull ...
Assignment 8 Solutions
... In the “old days”, long before CD’s and MP3’s, people listened to music using vinyl records. Long-playing vinyl records spin at a constant rate of 33-and-onethird rpm (revolutions per minute). The music is encoded onto a continuous spiral track on the record that starts at a radius of 30 cm from the ...
... In the “old days”, long before CD’s and MP3’s, people listened to music using vinyl records. Long-playing vinyl records spin at a constant rate of 33-and-onethird rpm (revolutions per minute). The music is encoded onto a continuous spiral track on the record that starts at a radius of 30 cm from the ...
AM #1-35 - Edublogs
... 7. What is the unit we use for work? 8. What is Power? 9. How do we calculate Power? AM #31 1. What is Power? 2. How do we calculate Power? 3. Define a machine. 4. Is it possible for any machine to have 100% efficiency? Why or Why not? 5. What are the 3 classes of levers? Give an example of each. 6 ...
... 7. What is the unit we use for work? 8. What is Power? 9. How do we calculate Power? AM #31 1. What is Power? 2. How do we calculate Power? 3. Define a machine. 4. Is it possible for any machine to have 100% efficiency? Why or Why not? 5. What are the 3 classes of levers? Give an example of each. 6 ...
scalar: quantity described by magnitude (size) only vector: quantity
... a. describe the motion of the object (starting position, direction of motion, velocity) b. draw the corresponding v vs. t graph c. draw the corresponding a vs. t graph d. determine the instantaneous velocity of the object at a given time 2. Given a v vs. t graph, you should be able to: a. describe t ...
... a. describe the motion of the object (starting position, direction of motion, velocity) b. draw the corresponding v vs. t graph c. draw the corresponding a vs. t graph d. determine the instantaneous velocity of the object at a given time 2. Given a v vs. t graph, you should be able to: a. describe t ...
November 18
... Calculating Moments of Inertia: A set of four atoms are bound into a square with sides of length a. If a constant torque is applied to one of the masses so that the system will rotate about the axes shown, which of the following configurations will have the largest angular acceleration? ...
... Calculating Moments of Inertia: A set of four atoms are bound into a square with sides of length a. If a constant torque is applied to one of the masses so that the system will rotate about the axes shown, which of the following configurations will have the largest angular acceleration? ...
Geography 04b
... Now let us return to the Earth. Because the Earth rotates about its axis, it is actually an accelerating reference frame. Fortunately, for most purposes, the resulting fictitious forces are very small. If this were not the case, Newton might never have discovered his famous laws! But there are situa ...
... Now let us return to the Earth. Because the Earth rotates about its axis, it is actually an accelerating reference frame. Fortunately, for most purposes, the resulting fictitious forces are very small. If this were not the case, Newton might never have discovered his famous laws! But there are situa ...
SHM
... (ii) On the same graph in (i), use a dotted line to sketch the graph of kinetic energy of the system against x. Briefly explain your graph by using energy-based arguments. (4 marks) (b) In (a), the spring is assumed to have negligible mass. However, no spring is completely massless. To find the effe ...
... (ii) On the same graph in (i), use a dotted line to sketch the graph of kinetic energy of the system against x. Briefly explain your graph by using energy-based arguments. (4 marks) (b) In (a), the spring is assumed to have negligible mass. However, no spring is completely massless. To find the effe ...
Chapter 9
... Elastic and inelastic collisions • During a collision, the total linear momentum is always conserved if the system is isolated (no external force) • It may not necessarily apply to the total kinetic energy • If the total kinetic energy is conserved during the collision, then such a collision is cal ...
... Elastic and inelastic collisions • During a collision, the total linear momentum is always conserved if the system is isolated (no external force) • It may not necessarily apply to the total kinetic energy • If the total kinetic energy is conserved during the collision, then such a collision is cal ...
Environmental Physics for Freshman Geography Students
... Now let us return to the Earth. Because the Earth rotates about its axis, it is actually an accelerating reference frame. Fortunately, for most purposes, the resulting fictitious forces are very small. If this were not the case, Newton might never have discovered his famous laws! But there are situa ...
... Now let us return to the Earth. Because the Earth rotates about its axis, it is actually an accelerating reference frame. Fortunately, for most purposes, the resulting fictitious forces are very small. If this were not the case, Newton might never have discovered his famous laws! But there are situa ...
1. Which of the following is closest to your mass? A.0.06 kg B.0.6 kg
... 7.A vector of magnitude 20 is added to a vector of magnitude 25. The magnitude of this sum might be: A.zero B.3 C.12 D.47 E.50 8.Two vectors lie with their tails at the same pint. When the angle between them is increased by 20 degrees their scalar product has the same magnitude but changes from posi ...
... 7.A vector of magnitude 20 is added to a vector of magnitude 25. The magnitude of this sum might be: A.zero B.3 C.12 D.47 E.50 8.Two vectors lie with their tails at the same pint. When the angle between them is increased by 20 degrees their scalar product has the same magnitude but changes from posi ...
Mass versus weight
In everyday usage, the mass of an object is often referred to as its weight though these are in fact different concepts and quantities. In scientific contexts, mass refers loosely to the amount of ""matter"" in an object (though ""matter"" may be difficult to define), whereas weight refers to the force experienced by an object due to gravity. In other words, an object with a mass of 1.0 kilogram will weigh approximately 9.81 newtons (newton is the unit of force, while kilogram is the unit of mass) on the surface of the Earth (its mass multiplied by the gravitational field strength). Its weight will be less on Mars (where gravity is weaker), more on Saturn, and negligible in space when far from any significant source of gravity, but it will always have the same mass.Objects on the surface of the Earth have weight, although sometimes this weight is difficult to measure. An example is a small object floating in a pool of water (or even on a dish of water), which does not appear to have weight since it is buoyed by the water; but it is found to have its usual weight when it is added to water in a container which is entirely supported by and weighed on a scale. Thus, the ""weightless object"" floating in water actually transfers its weight to the bottom of the container (where the pressure increases). Similarly, a balloon has mass but may appear to have no weight or even negative weight, due to buoyancy in air. However the weight of the balloon and the gas inside it has merely been transferred to a large area of the Earth's surface, making the weight difficult to measure. The weight of a flying airplane is similarly distributed to the ground, but does not disappear. If the airplane is in level flight, the same weight-force is distributed to the surface of the Earth as when the plane was on the runway, but spread over a larger area.A better scientific definition of mass is its description as being composed of inertia, which basically is the resistance of an object being accelerated when acted on by an external force. Gravitational ""weight"" is the force created when a mass is acted upon by a gravitational field and the object is not allowed to free-fall, but is supported or retarded by a mechanical force, such as the surface of a planet. Such a force constitutes weight. This force can be added to by any other kind of force.For example, in the photograph, the girl's weight, subtracted from the tension in the chain (respectively the support force of the seat), yields the necessary centripetal force to keep her swinging in an arc. If one stands behind her at the bottom of her arc and abruptly stops her, the impetus (""bump"" or stopping-force) one experiences is due to acting against her inertia, and would be the same even if gravity were suddenly switched off.While the weight of an object varies in proportion to the strength of the gravitational field, its mass is constant (ignoring relativistic effects) as long as no energy or matter is added to the object. Accordingly, for an astronaut on a spacewalk in orbit (a free-fall), no effort is required to hold a communications satellite in front of him; it is ""weightless"". However, since objects in orbit retain their mass and inertia, an astronaut must exert ten times as much force to accelerate a 10‑ton satellite at the same rate as one with a mass of only 1 ton.On Earth, a swing set can demonstrate this relationship between force, mass, and acceleration. If one were to stand behind a large adult sitting stationary on a swing and give him a strong push, the adult would temporarily accelerate to a quite low speed, and then swing only a short distance before beginning to swing in the opposite direction. Applying the same impetus to a small child would produce a much greater speed.