07_tension1_hw
... 7. )A 3 kg decoration is suspended by a string from the ceiling inside an elevator. A) The elevator is traveling upward with a constant speed. What is the tension on the string? B) Once the elevator reaches the top floor, it accelerates at a rate of –2 m/s2 to stop. What is the tension on the string ...
... 7. )A 3 kg decoration is suspended by a string from the ceiling inside an elevator. A) The elevator is traveling upward with a constant speed. What is the tension on the string? B) Once the elevator reaches the top floor, it accelerates at a rate of –2 m/s2 to stop. What is the tension on the string ...
Circular Motion
... Any force that is directed at a right angle to the path of a moving object and that tends to produce circular motion. Gravitational force directed toward the center of the Earth holds the moon in an almost circular orbit around the Earth. Electrons revolving around the nucleus of the atom are held i ...
... Any force that is directed at a right angle to the path of a moving object and that tends to produce circular motion. Gravitational force directed toward the center of the Earth holds the moon in an almost circular orbit around the Earth. Electrons revolving around the nucleus of the atom are held i ...
Newton`s Second Law of Motion
... D. As an object falls faster and air drag increases, acceleration gets less and less. E. When the net force of the air drag equals the weight then net force is __________ F. Terminal speed is when acceleration no longer occurs. Terminal velocity is when we look at speed and direction. ...
... D. As an object falls faster and air drag increases, acceleration gets less and less. E. When the net force of the air drag equals the weight then net force is __________ F. Terminal speed is when acceleration no longer occurs. Terminal velocity is when we look at speed and direction. ...
Free fall study
... c) Centrifugal force of the Earths’ rotation An acceleration corresponding to this force must be subtracted from the acceleration due to gravity calculated from the Newton’s law of universal gravitation to be able to obtain comparable results with our measurement. The formula for the subtraction is ...
... c) Centrifugal force of the Earths’ rotation An acceleration corresponding to this force must be subtracted from the acceleration due to gravity calculated from the Newton’s law of universal gravitation to be able to obtain comparable results with our measurement. The formula for the subtraction is ...
Newton`s Laws of Motion
... you pushed a hockey puck with 200 N? 1. 0 N 2. 200 N against the push 3. 200 N in the direction of the push ...
... you pushed a hockey puck with 200 N? 1. 0 N 2. 200 N against the push 3. 200 N in the direction of the push ...
Document
... What are forces on book? W • Weight is downward • System is “in equilibrium” (acceleration = 0 net force = 0) • Therefore, weight balanced by another force • FN = “normal force” = force exerted by surface on object • FN is always perpendicular to surface and outward • For this example FN = W ...
... What are forces on book? W • Weight is downward • System is “in equilibrium” (acceleration = 0 net force = 0) • Therefore, weight balanced by another force • FN = “normal force” = force exerted by surface on object • FN is always perpendicular to surface and outward • For this example FN = W ...
Newton`s Second Law Power Point
... defines the second law and demonstrates how to calculate a person's mass using the law. There is also a discussion about how people experience different g forces at the top and bottom of a roller coaster hill. Footage of the instructor in a fighter jet illustrates what it means to pull 2 and 4 g. NA ...
... defines the second law and demonstrates how to calculate a person's mass using the law. There is also a discussion about how people experience different g forces at the top and bottom of a roller coaster hill. Footage of the instructor in a fighter jet illustrates what it means to pull 2 and 4 g. NA ...
Ch. 8. Energy
... 15. What is the resultant of two vectors, each of length 100 units and at right angles to the other R = (A2 + B2)1/2 = (1002 + 1002)1/2 = 140 units 16. What is the ground speed of a plane which is traveling at 80 km/h, if it encounters (a) tailwind of 10 km/h (b) headwind of 15 km/h (c) 60 km/h wind ...
... 15. What is the resultant of two vectors, each of length 100 units and at right angles to the other R = (A2 + B2)1/2 = (1002 + 1002)1/2 = 140 units 16. What is the ground speed of a plane which is traveling at 80 km/h, if it encounters (a) tailwind of 10 km/h (b) headwind of 15 km/h (c) 60 km/h wind ...
PRACTICE FINAL EXAM Multiple Choice
... 3. For an object moving with constant negative acceleration, draw the following: a. a graph of position vs. time b. a graph of velocity vs. time For both graphs, assume the object starts with a positive velocity and a positive displacement from the origin. ...
... 3. For an object moving with constant negative acceleration, draw the following: a. a graph of position vs. time b. a graph of velocity vs. time For both graphs, assume the object starts with a positive velocity and a positive displacement from the origin. ...
Equilibrium is not just translational, is is also rotational. While a set
... wall. The wall exerts only a normal force and no frictional force. A firefighter, whose weight is WF = 875 N, stands 6.30 m from the bottom of the ladder. Assume that the weight of the ladder acts at the ladder’s center and neglect the weight of the hose?!?! (Leggs, maybe?) Find the forces that the ...
... wall. The wall exerts only a normal force and no frictional force. A firefighter, whose weight is WF = 875 N, stands 6.30 m from the bottom of the ladder. Assume that the weight of the ladder acts at the ladder’s center and neglect the weight of the hose?!?! (Leggs, maybe?) Find the forces that the ...
Honors Physics - Practice Final Exam
... 53. A 0.50 kg mass is attached to the end of a 1.0 m string. The system is whirled in a horizontal circular path. If the maximum tension that the string can withstand is 350 N, what is the maximum speed of the mass if the string is not to break? A. 700 m/s C. 19 m/s B. 26 m/s D. 13 m/s 54. An objec ...
... 53. A 0.50 kg mass is attached to the end of a 1.0 m string. The system is whirled in a horizontal circular path. If the maximum tension that the string can withstand is 350 N, what is the maximum speed of the mass if the string is not to break? A. 700 m/s C. 19 m/s B. 26 m/s D. 13 m/s 54. An objec ...
Study Materials - English
... that all the planets go around the sun. The moon goes around the earth. In all these cases, there must be some force acting on the objects, planets, and on the moon. Sir Isaac Newton could grasp that “The same force” is responsible for all of these. This force is called the “gravitational force”. Gr ...
... that all the planets go around the sun. The moon goes around the earth. In all these cases, there must be some force acting on the objects, planets, and on the moon. Sir Isaac Newton could grasp that “The same force” is responsible for all of these. This force is called the “gravitational force”. Gr ...
Document
... Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion: if one object exerts a force on another object, then the second object exerts a force of equal strength in the opposite direction on the first object. Ex. a skater pushes on another; both move but the skater who pushed is pushed back with an equal but opposite force. ...
... Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion: if one object exerts a force on another object, then the second object exerts a force of equal strength in the opposite direction on the first object. Ex. a skater pushes on another; both move but the skater who pushed is pushed back with an equal but opposite force. ...
hw4,5
... 11) A player hits a ball with a bat. The action force is the impact of the bat against the ball. The reaction to this force is the A) air resistance on the ball. B) weight of the ball. C) force of the ball against the bat. D) grip of the player's hand against the ball. E) none of these. ...
... 11) A player hits a ball with a bat. The action force is the impact of the bat against the ball. The reaction to this force is the A) air resistance on the ball. B) weight of the ball. C) force of the ball against the bat. D) grip of the player's hand against the ball. E) none of these. ...
G-force
g-force (with g from gravitational) is a measurement of the type of acceleration that causes weight. Despite the name, it is incorrect to consider g-force a fundamental force, as ""g-force"" (lower case character) is a type of acceleration that can be measured with an accelerometer. Since g-force accelerations indirectly produce weight, any g-force can be described as a ""weight per unit mass"" (see the synonym specific weight). When the g-force acceleration is produced by the surface of one object being pushed by the surface of another object, the reaction-force to this push produces an equal and opposite weight for every unit of an object's mass. The types of forces involved are transmitted through objects by interior mechanical stresses. The g-force acceleration (save for certain electromagnetic force influences) is the cause of an object's acceleration in relation to free-fall.The g-force acceleration experienced by an object is due to the vector sum of all non-gravitational and non-electromagnetic forces acting on an object's freedom to move. In practice, as noted, these are surface-contact forces between objects. Such forces cause stresses and strains on objects, since they must be transmitted from an object surface. Because of these strains, large g-forces may be destructive.Gravitation acting alone does not produce a g-force, even though g-forces are expressed in multiples of the acceleration of a standard gravity. Thus, the standard gravitational acceleration at the Earth's surface produces g-force only indirectly, as a result of resistance to it by mechanical forces. These mechanical forces actually produce the g-force acceleration on a mass. For example, the 1 g force on an object sitting on the Earth's surface is caused by mechanical force exerted in the upward direction by the ground, keeping the object from going into free-fall. The upward contact-force from the ground ensures that an object at rest on the Earth's surface is accelerating relative to the free-fall condition (Free fall is the path that the object would follow when falling freely toward the Earth's center). Stress inside the object is ensured from the fact that the ground contact forces are transmitted only from the point of contact with the ground.Objects allowed to free-fall in an inertial trajectory under the influence of gravitation-only, feel no g-force acceleration, a condition known as zero-g (which means zero g-force). This is demonstrated by the ""zero-g"" conditions inside a freely falling elevator falling toward the Earth's center (in vacuum), or (to good approximation) conditions inside a spacecraft in Earth orbit. These are examples of coordinate acceleration (a change in velocity) without a sensation of weight. The experience of no g-force (zero-g), however it is produced, is synonymous with weightlessness.In the absence of gravitational fields, or in directions at right angles to them, proper and coordinate accelerations are the same, and any coordinate acceleration must be produced by a corresponding g-force acceleration. An example here is a rocket in free space, in which simple changes in velocity are produced by the engines, and produce g-forces on the rocket and passengers.