If you have equal masses of two different substances (A and B), and the density of A is twice the density of B, then the volume of A is ________ the volume of B.
| a. The same as |
| b. One-half |
| c. Two times |
| d. One-quarter |
| e. Four times |
If you have equal masses of two different substances (A and B), and the density of...
Two spinning disks have equal masses and the same angular momentum. If disk 1 has half the radius as disk 2, how does the angular speed of disk 1 compare with that of disk 2? It is twice as much. It is four times as much It is half as much It is 1/4 has much
Two objects are traveling around different circular orbits with constant speed. They both have the same acceleration but object A is traveling one-half as fast as object B.The orbital radius for object A is ____ the orbit radius for object B. A) One-fourth B) Four times C) One-half D) twice
6. Alpha and Beta are two spherical planets. The density of Alpha is twice the density of Beta, but the radius of Beta is 2 times the radius of Alpha. The gravitational acceleration at the surface of Alpha is a) Two-thirds of Beta's d) One-fifth of Beta's b) One-half of Beta's e) One-third of Beta's c) Equal to Beta's
Two substances A and B, initially at different temperatures, are thermally isolated from their surroundings and allowed to come into thermal contact. The mass of substance A is twice the mass of substance B, but the specific heat capacity of substance B is four times the specific heat capacity of substance A. Which substance will undergo a larger change in temperature?
017 10.0 points Consider two bicycle riders, A and B. The two riders have equal masses MderMBde and their respective bicycles also have sim- ilar frames, the wheels of the two bicycles have equal masses MWheel and equal radii MframeMame Finally, eheel but different mass distribu- tions: the wheels of bike A have most of their masses at the rims, Wheel A, while the wheels of bike B have their masses 'spread' evenly over the whole wheel area, Wheel B...
For equal masses of each of the following substances, circle the one that one that would result in the largest temp. change if 100. J was absorbed by each substance A) H2O(1) B) Hg(1) C)Air D) Au
The same heat transfer into identical masses of different substances produces different temperature changes. Calculate the final temperature in degrees Celsius when 1.50 kcal of heat enters 1.00 kg of the following, originally at 17.5°C. (a) water (b) concrete (c) steel (d) mercury
The same heat transfer into identical masses of different substances produces different temperature changes. Calculate the final temperature in degrees Celsius when 1.25 kcal of heat enters 1.25 kg of the following, originally at 15.0°C. (a)water °C (b)concrete°C (c)steel °C (d) mercury °C
The same heat transfer into identical masses of different substances produces different temperature changes. Calculate the final temperature in degrees Celsius when 1.00 kcal of heat enters 1.50 kg of the following, originally at 15.0°C. (a) water °C (b) concrete °C (c) steel °C (d) mercury °C
You have two ropes of the same length. The mass of the second rope is twice the mass of the first rope. The velocity of a wave in the second rope is __________ the velocity of a wave in the first rope. (Assume equal tensions.) a) the same as b) one over square root of 2 c) square root of 2 d) one half e) twice