
Solve for the surface gravity on Mars. Set up the equation with variables before you put...
What is the acceleration due to gravity on the surface of Mars (diameter of Mars is 6794 km; mass of Mars is 6.42 kg)? How far above the surface of Mars must one be for the acceleration due to gravity to be g/4? 2) 1000 671 e。 r= 339 200
if gravity on mars is 30% of that what is on earth then solve: when visiting mars and wearing a spacesuit of 150 kg you are able to jump 40 cm up. 1. how high can you jump on earth? if you drop a 5 kg book from 2 inches on mars, then 2. how fast is the book falling when it hits the ground? 3. how much faster would the book fall it were dropped on earth? use ratio...
you must set up 2 equations, you must set up the
matrices.
Solve the following word problems. Remember: define your variables, write a system of equations to represent the situation, and use elimination or substitution to solve. 1. The sum of twice a number and 4 times another number is 4. The first number decreased by the second number is 5. Find the numbers.
The magnitude of the force of gravity on you, when you’re at rest on the surface of Earth, is your weight. How does your weight on Earth compare with your weight on Mars (which is the magnitude of the force of gravity on you, when you’re at rest on the surface of Mars)?
Set up an equation and solve the problem. Suppose that the sum of two numbers is 20, and the sum of their squares is 250. Find the numbers.
It turns out that Mercury and Mars have the same gravity as one another – that is, you would weigh the same on the surface of Mercury as you would on the surface of Mars, despite the fact that Mercury is smaller. Why is this the case?
A student traveled to Mars, and wanted to find the acceleration due to gravity there. She set up an Atwood's machine to do this and found the local acceleration due to gravity to be 4.1 m/s^2, and she had a nice Gaussian distribution with a standard deviation of the mean (SDOM) of 0.1 m/s^2. What is the t-score?
5. (1 point) The accelerati on due to gravity on Mars is about 40% of what it is on Earth. a stone from a height of 100 m above the surface of Mars, for about how f you dropped long would it fall? (a) 2 s (b) 4.5 s (c) 7.1 s (d) 51 s
1. It turns out that Mercury and Mars have the same gravity as one another – that is, you would weigh the same on the surface of Mercury as you would on the surface of Mars, despite the fact that Mercury is smaller. Why is this the case? 2. that even if Venus used to have oceans (and maybe even life), there is no way for us to tell today whether this was ever the case. Thinking about what we...
Set up the system as a matrix equation, and then solve the system using the Laplace transform method. 3x,+4x, x (0) = 1 x3x,+2x2, x (0) = 1 1.
Set up the system as a matrix equation, and then solve the system using the Laplace transform method. 3x,+4x, x (0) = 1 x3x,+2x2, x (0) = 1 1.