Unit 2
... students to know that inertia is the tendency of objects to resist any change in motion. Inertia is a property of the object; it is not a force. ...
... students to know that inertia is the tendency of objects to resist any change in motion. Inertia is a property of the object; it is not a force. ...
Winter Final Review with answers
... An object travels 8 meters in the first second of travel, 8 meters during the second second of travel, and 8 meters again during the third second. What is its acceleration? Zero. Ten seconds after starting from rest, a car is moving at 40 m/s. What is the car's average acceleration? 4 m/s/s. What ha ...
... An object travels 8 meters in the first second of travel, 8 meters during the second second of travel, and 8 meters again during the third second. What is its acceleration? Zero. Ten seconds after starting from rest, a car is moving at 40 m/s. What is the car's average acceleration? 4 m/s/s. What ha ...
Electric Forces, Fields, and Voltage
... (2) Two point charges of 2.00 x 10-7 C and 8.50 x 10-8 C are 12.0 cm apart. (a) What electric field does each produce at the site of the other? (b) What force acts on each charge? (c) Where between them will the electric field be zero? (3) Two equally charged objects 3.20 mm apart are released from ...
... (2) Two point charges of 2.00 x 10-7 C and 8.50 x 10-8 C are 12.0 cm apart. (a) What electric field does each produce at the site of the other? (b) What force acts on each charge? (c) Where between them will the electric field be zero? (3) Two equally charged objects 3.20 mm apart are released from ...
Honors Physics – 1st Semester Exam Review
... a. Kinetic Energy – Is the object moving? i. KE = ½ mv2 ii. KE is a scalar (technically depends on speed, not velocity) iii. Soup can lab: translational and rotational KE iv. KE is conserved in elastic collisions, but not in inelastic collisions b. Gravitational Potential Energy – Is the object some ...
... a. Kinetic Energy – Is the object moving? i. KE = ½ mv2 ii. KE is a scalar (technically depends on speed, not velocity) iii. Soup can lab: translational and rotational KE iv. KE is conserved in elastic collisions, but not in inelastic collisions b. Gravitational Potential Energy – Is the object some ...
Solutions to Period 3 Exercises
... directions on an object, the net force equals the difference between the forces. e) None of the above statements is FALSE. Forces can act on a stationary object. For example, two forces of equal strength can act in opposite directions and cancel each other. The object does not move. E.2 = b ...
... directions on an object, the net force equals the difference between the forces. e) None of the above statements is FALSE. Forces can act on a stationary object. For example, two forces of equal strength can act in opposite directions and cancel each other. The object does not move. E.2 = b ...
Weightlessness
Weightlessness, or an absence of 'weight', is an absence of stress and strain resulting from externally applied mechanical contact-forces, typically normal forces from floors, seats, beds, scales, and the like. Counterintuitively, a uniform gravitational field does not by itself cause stress or strain, and a body in free fall in such an environment experiences no g-force acceleration and feels weightless. This is also termed ""zero-g"" where the term is more correctly understood as meaning ""zero g-force.""When bodies are acted upon by non-gravitational forces, as in a centrifuge, a rotating space station, or within a space ship with rockets firing, a sensation of weight is produced, as the contact forces from the moving structure act to overcome the body's inertia. In such cases, a sensation of weight, in the sense of a state of stress can occur, even if the gravitational field was zero. In such cases, g-forces are felt, and bodies are not weightless.When the gravitational field is non-uniform, a body in free fall suffers tidal effects and is not stress-free. Near a black hole, such tidal effects can be very strong. In the case of the Earth, the effects are minor, especially on objects of relatively small dimension (such as the human body or a spacecraft) and the overall sensation of weightlessness in these cases is preserved. This condition is known as microgravity and it prevails in orbiting spacecraft.