I have a hmwk question, "How high above Earth’s surface would you have to be before your weight was only half its current
value?"
I have a hmwk question, "How high above Earth’s surface would you have to be before...
How far above the surface of the earth would you have to be before your weight is reduced by 12.29%?
How far above the surface of the earth would you have to be before your weight is reduced by 13.26%?
How many kilometers would you have to go above the surface of the earth for your weight to decrease to 36 % of what it was at the surface?
How many kilometers would you have to go above the surface of the earth for your weight to decrease to 30 % of what it was at the surface? Express your answer using 2 sig figs
How high does a rocket have to go above the Earth's surface until its weight is 0.3 times its weight on the Earth's surface? The radius of the earth is 6.37 x 10^6 m and the acceleration of gravity is 9.8 m/s^2. Answer in units of km.
How far above the surface of the Earth will a person’s weight be reduced to one-quarter its value at the surface? g=Gme/r2 where me is the mass of the Earth, r is the distance from the Earth’s center to the height above Earth and G is the proportionality constant. You will need to look up the mass and radius of the Earth.
How far above the surface of the Earth will a person’s weight be reduced to one-quarter its value at the surface? Hint: g=Gme/r2 where me is the mass of the Earth, r is the distance from the Earth’s center to the height above Earth and G is the proportionality constant. You will need to look up the mass and radius of the Earth.
A rocket is launched from the Earth’s surface. Unfortunately, the engineers have miscalculated and the rocket runs out of fuel when its height is exactly one earth radii above the earth’s surface. The rocket immediately falls from rest back to toward the surface. Ignore friction and air resistance in your calculations. R subscript E equals 6.37 cross times 10 to the power of 6 space m e t e r s comma space M subscript E equals 5.98 cross times...
Suppose that you are planning a two-group experiment. How high would your t value have to be for half of the variance of your dependent variable to be accounted for a. If you use 25 participants per group? b. If you use 81 participants per group? Please show ALL work, including the formulas used.
The International Space Station, ISS hereafter, has an orbital period of approxi- mately 93 minutes. Determine the following: 12. How fast is the ISS moving? 13. How far above the surface of the Earth is the ISS? 14. Using only your answer to question 12 and the given orbital perdiod of the ISS, determine how high the Hubble Space Telescope orbits above the surface of the Earth, if its orbital period is 95.42 minutes 15. If NASA launched portable rocket-boosters...