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Force, mass, acceleration lab
Force, mass, acceleration lab

... • What was the purpose of this lab? (The purpose of this lab was to…..) • What did the data show you and was your hypothesis supported by your data? (summarize what you found out during this experiment) • How can you explain your data? (why did the acceleration do what it did when you changed the m ...
A body acted on by no net force moves with constant velocity
A body acted on by no net force moves with constant velocity

... The concept of force gives us a quantitative description of the interaction between two bodies or between a body and its environment ...
Artificial Gravity - Northern Illinois University
Artificial Gravity - Northern Illinois University

... There is a corresponding centripetal force for object on the inside wall. ...
Forces - New Haven Science
Forces - New Haven Science

... 3) A 1850 kg car is moving to the right at a constant velocity of 1.44 m/s. What is the net force on the cart? 4) A man is pushing a 200 Newton box with a force of 50 Newtons along the floor. A dog is pushing against him with a force of 4 N . What is the acceleration of the box? Draw a free body dia ...
Turbo Science
Turbo Science

... object and the force (gravity) acting on it.  There is a trade-off between mass and force The extra mass of the baseball balances the additional gravitational pull needed to accelerate the ball. ...
VIII. ATOMIC  BEAMS Prof.  J.  R.  Zacharias
VIII. ATOMIC BEAMS Prof. J. R. Zacharias

... hyperfine structure of doublet states (1) has been applied to the study of the hfs anomaly in atomic p-states. tory on the P 3 / ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... Newton knew that at the surface of the earth bodies (apples) fall 5 m in the first second, and that this acceleration is due to earth’s gravity. He showed that the gravity force is the same as if all earth’s mass were at its center, 4000 mi from the surface. He wondered whether the same force attrac ...
A vector is a quantity that has A. magnitude, only B. direction, only C
A vector is a quantity that has A. magnitude, only B. direction, only C

... The third law: For every action force there is an equal and opposite reaction force. A driver starts her car and steps on the gas pedal. The car gradually accelerates to 50 km/hr. A few minutes later, the driver suddenly slams on the brakes to avoid hitting a box in the road. As the car comes to a s ...
Gravity
Gravity

... • Car rounding a curve has centripetal force, this comes from traction (friction of tires on road) • If friction is too small, car will move in a straight line (off the road) • Anything that travels in a circle is doing so from centripetal force, accelerating it toward the ...
The Ferris Wheel: Answers
The Ferris Wheel: Answers

... the following formula. Acceleration = v2 / R = (4 x 2 x R) / T2 Question 1: a) Work out the centripetal acceleration of a passenger on the Ferris Wheel using the value for velocity that you calculated above? Since you already know v and R you can use the first part of the equation. a = 0.13 m/s2 b) ...
amanda`sGravity and Free Fall
amanda`sGravity and Free Fall

... in two dimensions under the influence of gravity. The downward acceleration due to gravity does not change a projectile’s horizontal motion, and that does not affect the downward motion. ...
Wed Lecture
Wed Lecture

... Suppose you are driving through a valley whose bottom has a circular shape. If your mass is m, what is the magnitude of the normal force FN exerted on you by the car seat as you drive past the bottom of the hill A. FN < mg a=v2/R ...
File
File

... as they start down an icy 22.6 degree incline with a coefficient of friction equal to 0.10? The boy is then pulled back to the top of the hill at a constant speed by a tow rope. What is the tension in the rope? ...
Gravitation and Rotational Motion
Gravitation and Rotational Motion

... Centrifugal Force- This is the apparent force that seems to pull on a moving object, but does not exert a physical outward push on it, and is observed only in rotating frames of reference. ...
Equilibrium & Newton`s 2nd Law of Motion
Equilibrium & Newton`s 2nd Law of Motion

... him up with a force of 150-N. • Sketch the free body diagram. • Calculate his acceleration as he falls to Earth. • Why is his actual acceleration different than g? ...
Physics AS
Physics AS

... A couple is a pair of forces equal in magnitude, opposite in direction but not in line which cause a turning effect on an object. torque of a couple = magnitude of one of the forces x the perpendicular distance between them ...
Radial (Centripetal) Acceleration – ar or ac
Radial (Centripetal) Acceleration – ar or ac

...  (alpha) was called ‘angular acceleration’ and since angular speed  is constant and the derivative of a constant is zero,  = 0 rad/s2. Furthermore, since at = R , uniform circular motion means both tangential acceleration and angular acceleration are zero. II. Centripetal (Radial) Acceleration ‘ ...
Circular Motion Problems
Circular Motion Problems

... A 515kg roller coaster is at the bottom of a loop with a radius of 10m. If the speed at the bottom of the loop is 20m/s, what is the force of the track pushing up on the vehicle at this point? 25,750 N ...
Force & Motion - Independent School District 196
Force & Motion - Independent School District 196

... If forces occur in equal but opposite pairs, how can anything ever move? According to Newton’s third law, the equal and opposite forces work on different objects. Read more about this here: http://www.mansfieldct.org/schools/mms/staff /hand/Lawshowcananythingmove.htm ...
GS 388 handout: Gravity Anomalies: brief summary 1 1. Observed
GS 388 handout: Gravity Anomalies: brief summary 1 1. Observed

... and the gravity at one of the bench marks in a world-wide or national gravity network. These benchmarks have been tied (again, by a measurement of relative gravity with a geodetic gravimeter to cover a large range of gravity values) to one of the primary locations where absolute gravity has been det ...
Thompson Teaching
Thompson Teaching

... • In the 1978 movie “Superman,” there is a scene where Lois Lane falls from a helicopter crash at the top of a building. She falls from rest for 9.00 s before Superman catches her. a) Ignoring air resistance, determine her velocity (in km/h) at the moment Superman catches her. • (320 km/h is the ans ...
M-2 - University of Iowa Physics
M-2 - University of Iowa Physics

... 7.  If the velocity at t = 0 s is 0 m/s, then at any later time, t its velocity is v = g t. You can make  the table on your own.   ...
GRAVITY - Wilson Middle School
GRAVITY - Wilson Middle School

... • When you use the bathroom scale, you are measuring the gravitational force between your body and Earth…so, you are measuring your weight, which should be given in newtons! ...
Motion
Motion

... • You could be moving at a constant velocity OR you could me not moving at all 10 N ...
Review: Newton`s second Law
Review: Newton`s second Law

... (2)Sketch forces acting on object – indentify all the external forces acting on an object. (3) Choose coordinate system (x &y) (4) Resolve into components Apply 2nd law to each components. In components Fy  ma y Fx  ma x ...
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Pioneer anomaly

The Pioneer anomaly or Pioneer effect was the observed deviation from predicted accelerations of the Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 spacecraft after they passed about 20 astronomical units (3×109 km; 2×109 mi) on their trajectories out of the Solar System. The apparent anomaly was a matter of tremendous interest for many years, but has been subsequently explained by an anisotropic radiation pressure caused by the spacecraft's heat loss.Both Pioneer spacecraft are escaping the Solar System, but are slowing under the influence of the Sun's gravity. Upon very close examination of navigational data, the spacecraft were found to be slowing slightly more than expected. The effect is an extremely small acceleration towards the Sun, of 6990874000000000000♠(8.74±1.33)×10−10 m/s2, which is equivalent to slowly accelerating to a velocity of 1 kilometre per hour (0.6 mph) over a period of ten years. The two spacecraft were launched in 1972 and 1973 and the anomalous acceleration was first noticed as early as 1980, but not seriously investigated until 1994. The last communication with either spacecraft was in 2003, but analysis of recorded data continues.Various explanations, both of spacecraft behavior and of gravitation itself, were proposed to explain the anomaly. Over the period 1998–2012, one particular explanation became accepted. The spacecraft, which are surrounded by an ultra-high vacuum and are each powered by a radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG), can shed heat only via thermal radiation. If, due to the design of the spacecraft, more heat is emitted in a particular direction—what is known as a radiative anisotropy—then the spacecraft would accelerate slightly in the direction opposite of the excess emitted radiation due to radiation pressure. Because this force is due to the recoil of thermal photons, it is also called the thermal recoil force. If the excess radiation and attendant radiation pressure were pointed in a general direction opposite the Sun, the spacecraft's velocity away from the Sun would be decelerating at a greater rate than could be explained by previously recognized forces, such as gravity and trace friction, due to the interplanetary medium (imperfect vacuum).By 2012 several papers by different groups, all reanalyzing the thermal radiation pressure forces inherent in the spacecraft, showed that a careful accounting of this explains the entire anomaly, and thus the cause was mundane and did not point to any new phenomena or need for a different physical paradigm. The most detailed analysis to date, by some of the original investigators, explicitly looks at two methods of estimating thermal forces, then states ""We find no statistically significant difference between the two estimates and conclude that once the thermal recoil force is properly accounted for, no anomalous acceleration remains.""
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