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waves2 - World of Teaching
waves2 - World of Teaching

... • True lack of weight can only occur at huge distances from any other mass • Apparent weightlessness occurs during freefall where all parts of you body are accelerating at the same rate ...
Chapter 4
Chapter 4

... 15. Another name for starting friction is static friction, it is the frictional force that is needed to budge a static or stationary object. If a power supply weighing 22Lb is to be slid across a table where the coefficient of starting friction is 0.5, how much force is needed to budge the supply? 1 ...
Physics 150
Physics 150

... 1. A 10 kg crate sits 10 meters up an incline that makes an angle of 30 degrees with the horizontal direction. ...
Seismic Waves - Fort Thomas Independent Schools
Seismic Waves - Fort Thomas Independent Schools

... 4. If one string is thicker than the other at the same tension, what happens to the pitch 5. If two bottles have water in them, one more than the other, which will produce a higher pitch when someone blows over the opening? 6. If one chime is longer than another, which will produce the higher pitch. ...
Earthquakes - Chapter 10
Earthquakes - Chapter 10

5. A driver hits the brakes and accelerates at –3.8 m/s 2 for 2.9
5. A driver hits the brakes and accelerates at –3.8 m/s 2 for 2.9

... stop. How fast was he going before he hit the brakes? (Ans. = 11 m/s). The car has a mass of 400 kg. What was the net force on the car? (Ans: Fnet = -1520 N) 6. Add the following vectors. Find the resultant vector. a) 3.0 N [E] + 5.2 N [E] ...
File
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... • The Center of Gravity of an object is the point on an object that acts like the place at which all the weight is concentrated. ...
Force Equals Mass Times Acceleration
Force Equals Mass Times Acceleration

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V 1 V 2

Chapter 10 Lesson 2
Chapter 10 Lesson 2

... for the 2-kg mass in the previous problem? (A = 12 cm, k = 400 N/m) The maximum acceleration occurs when the restoring force is a maximum; i.e., when the stretch or compression of the spring is largest. F = ma = -kx ...
Newton`s 1st Law Lab Activities
Newton`s 1st Law Lab Activities

... it a good push with your finger or hand. What happens? Record data by drawing.  2. Flick a stack of two washers into a stack of four washers. What happens? Record data. ...
Earthquakes
Earthquakes

... Each station knows the distance to the epicentre but not it’s direction. When the data from three stations are plotted, the point where they intersect locates the epicentre. ...
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Newton`s Laws…Conceptually
Newton`s Laws…Conceptually

Notes: Forces and the Laws of Motion
Notes: Forces and the Laws of Motion

... In other words: Examples: 1. A boy pushes forward a cart of groceries with a total mass of 40.0 kg. What is the acceleration of the cart if the net force on the cart is 60.0 N? 2. Ms. Andi is on a rolley chair on a nearly frictionless surface. Mr. Door pushes her to the right with 25N and Ms. Brock ...
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Final Exam

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Chapter-2-study

Force Equals Mass Times Acceleration
Force Equals Mass Times Acceleration

General Physics – ph 211
General Physics – ph 211

... 1. The acceleration of an object does not have to be in the same direction as the net force applied to it. 2. The force of static friction always equals sFN. 3. An object cannot move in a circle unless there is net force acting on it. 4. When a ball is thrown upward, it reaches its maximum height w ...
LOCATION OF A TELESEISMIC EARTHQUAKES – (Keith Priestley
LOCATION OF A TELESEISMIC EARTHQUAKES – (Keith Priestley

... will record best on the vertical and shear phases will record best on the horizontals. The Rayleigh waves will normally appear on all three long period components but the Love waves will only appear on the horizontal components. There are several phases to be found on the long period records but it ...
Name: ______ Date: ____________ Hr: ______ Newton`s 2nd Law
Name: ______ Date: ____________ Hr: ______ Newton`s 2nd Law

Lecture15
Lecture15

... • Then a = -w2x. To find x(t), a function that satisfies this equation is needed – Need a function x(t) whose second derivative is the same as the original function with a negative sign and multiplied by w2 ...
post 1 review - OnMyCalendar
post 1 review - OnMyCalendar

Math Practice Problems 2nd 8 weeks
Math Practice Problems 2nd 8 weeks

... 1. A 14-kg object is travelling at a speed or velocity of 10.0 m/s. Determine it’s momentum. 2. What is the velocity of an object that has a momentum of 80.0 kg x m/s if it has a mass of 25-kg. 3. A person pushes an object with a 50-N force for a total distance of 25-m. What work was done on this ob ...
Practice with Newton`s First and Second Laws Name: 1. Which of the
Practice with Newton`s First and Second Laws Name: 1. Which of the

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Seismometer

Seismometers are instruments that measure motion of the ground, including those of seismic waves generated by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and other seismic sources. Records of seismic waves allow seismologists to map the interior of the Earth, and locate and measure the size of these different sources.The word derives from the Greek σεισμός, seismós, a shaking or quake, from the verb σείω, seíō, to shake; and μέτρον, métron, measure and was coined by David Milne-Home in 1841, to describe an instrument designed by Scottish physicist James David Forbes.Seismograph is another Greek term from seismós and γράφω, gráphō, to draw. It is often used to mean seismometer, though it is more applicable to the older instruments in which the measuring and recording of ground motion were combined than to modern systems, in which these functions are separated.Both types provide a continuous record of ground motion; this distinguishes them from seismoscopes, which merely indicate that motion has occurred, perhaps with some simple measure of how large it was.The concerning technical discipline is called seismometry, a branch of seismology.
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