additional assignments
... 38. A ball of mass 175 g is attached to a string and it is twirled around in a horizontal circle of radius 75.0 cm at a frequency of 2.00 Hz. It revolves clockwise as seen from above. (a) Find the magnitude of its linear momentum. (b) Find its angular momentum vector about the center of the circle. ...
... 38. A ball of mass 175 g is attached to a string and it is twirled around in a horizontal circle of radius 75.0 cm at a frequency of 2.00 Hz. It revolves clockwise as seen from above. (a) Find the magnitude of its linear momentum. (b) Find its angular momentum vector about the center of the circle. ...
Work And Energy WORK DONE BY A CONSTANT FORCE
... The law of conservation of energy states that the total amount of energy in an isolated system remains constant. A consequence of this law is that energy cannot be created or destroyed. The only thing that can happen with energy in an isolated system is that it can change form, that is to say for in ...
... The law of conservation of energy states that the total amount of energy in an isolated system remains constant. A consequence of this law is that energy cannot be created or destroyed. The only thing that can happen with energy in an isolated system is that it can change form, that is to say for in ...
Newton`s First Law - Inertia
... Galileo and Newton – Recognized that all moving things follow the same rules – Things keep on moving unless a force (friction) stops it ...
... Galileo and Newton – Recognized that all moving things follow the same rules – Things keep on moving unless a force (friction) stops it ...
Energy
... the food you eat is converted into simple sugars that are burned as your muscles work against gravity as you climb the hill. ...
... the food you eat is converted into simple sugars that are burned as your muscles work against gravity as you climb the hill. ...
Lab M5: Hooke`s Law
... position of an edge of the tray. This will be the zero position, which you will subtract from all subsequent positions. There is a mirror by the meter stick scale so you can avoid parallax when you measure positions. Now add the slotted weights to the tray, one at a time, and measure the positions o ...
... position of an edge of the tray. This will be the zero position, which you will subtract from all subsequent positions. There is a mirror by the meter stick scale so you can avoid parallax when you measure positions. Now add the slotted weights to the tray, one at a time, and measure the positions o ...
Introduction to Mechanics Including Gravity
... The symbol U resembles a potential well or valley. Constant total energy and its decomposition into time-varying kinetic and potential parts are at the core of classical mechanics. Although total energy is always conserved, this particular decomposition is useful only under certain (very important) ...
... The symbol U resembles a potential well or valley. Constant total energy and its decomposition into time-varying kinetic and potential parts are at the core of classical mechanics. Although total energy is always conserved, this particular decomposition is useful only under certain (very important) ...
Version B
... which remains fixed in position. Assuming no frictional torque, what is the angular velocity of the cylinder after this collision? Is kinetic energy conserved? [Solution] Net external torque = 0. Angular momentum is conserved. ...
... which remains fixed in position. Assuming no frictional torque, what is the angular velocity of the cylinder after this collision? Is kinetic energy conserved? [Solution] Net external torque = 0. Angular momentum is conserved. ...
force
... B.Before it was discovered, the existence of the planet Neptune was predicted based on gravitational forces and Newton’s laws C.Momentum – related to how much force is needed to change an object’s motion; momentum equals mass times velocity D. Law of conservation of momentum – momentum can be tran ...
... B.Before it was discovered, the existence of the planet Neptune was predicted based on gravitational forces and Newton’s laws C.Momentum – related to how much force is needed to change an object’s motion; momentum equals mass times velocity D. Law of conservation of momentum – momentum can be tran ...
June 2008 - Vicphysics
... If the question is considered from a one dimensional point of view and seeing means light entering the eye, then either C or D is right, with D being the better answer. ...
... If the question is considered from a one dimensional point of view and seeing means light entering the eye, then either C or D is right, with D being the better answer. ...