
I will be glad to see your comment if you have any query and thumb up if you are satisfied. Thanks...
e countries use their ναισ ulen away." Suppose there is a 5ka Canada goose flying at...
PHYSICS 30 MOMENTUM AND IMPULSE Q9 ASSIGNMENT A. MOMENTUM AND IMPULSE a. C. 1. Use the concept of Impulse to describe one advantage of seatbelts. 2. A 5.00 kg mass is moving with a velocity of 3.50 m/s. A force of 4.00 N acts on the object increasing its velocity (in the same direction) to 12.5 m/s. Determine Change in momentum b. Impulse the mass experiences Time interval that the force was applied for 3. A 15.0 kg object is...
1. A thin rod of mass M and length d hangs vertically from a frictionless pivot attached to one end. A piece of clay of mass m moving horizontally at a speed v hits the rod a distance x from the pivot and sticks to it. Discussion Questions: (In the first 5-10 min a random group will be selected to explain.) • What “type” of collision is happening? What is and is not conserved? • Consider the analogous linear momentum...
EXERCISE HINTS: GETTING STARTED I'M STUCKI A laser has a power of 20.0 W and a beam radius of 0.549 mm. (a) Find the intensity of the laser. 2.11E7 I W/m2 (b) Suppose you were floating in space and pointed the laser beam away from you. What would your acceleration be? Assume your total mass, including equipment, is 73.3 kg and that the force is directed through your center of mass. Hint: The change in momentum is the same as...
There was a car accident. Someone stopped and the person
behind them rear ended them. The car that stopped slid away about
30 feet and the car that did the rear ending stopped right about
where the collision happened. Was this a perfectly inelastic
collision? Why or why not?
A perfectly elastic collision is one in which kinetic
energy is conserved. How exactly is kinetic energy not conserved
though? Sometime KE can be used up compressing/bending things and
making heat,...
Please answer part c this question has been posted previously
was given the wrong answer
To understand how the linear momentum equation is derived from Reynolds transport theorem and to use the equation to calculate forces. The Reynolds transport theorem(DNDt)syst-aatJcvηρdVtfcsqpVdA relates the change in an extensive quantity N for a system of Lagrangian particles (the left side) to the changes in an intensive quantity η:nm, where m is the mass of the system, in a Eulerian control volume that initially...
please answer all prelab questions, 1-4.
This is the prelab manual, just in case you need background
information to answer the questions. The prelab questions are in
the 3rd photo.
this where we put in the answers, just to give you an
idea.
Lab Manual Lab 9: Simple Harmonic Oscillation Before the lab, read the theory in Sections 1-3 and answer questions on Pre-lab Submit your Pre-lab at the beginning of the lab. During the lab, read Section 4 and...