Most surface wind systems are named...?

Answers

Answer 1
Answer: It's called trade winds.
Answer 2
Answer: I believe the answer is trade winds give me brainliest plz

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The leg's force forward on the foot= 500NThe foot's force forward on the ball= 500N
The ball's force back on the foot= 500N
What is the net force on the ball?
What is the net force on the foot?

Answers


There's so much going on here, in a short period of time.

Before the kick, as the foot swings toward the ball . . .

-- The net force on the ball is zero.  That's why it just lays there and
does not accelerate in any direction.

-- The net force on the foot is 500N, originating in the leg, causing it to
accelerate toward the ball.


During the kick ... the 0.1 second or so that the foot is in contact with the ball ...

-- The net force on the ball is 500N.  That's what makes it accelerate from
just laying there to taking off on a high arc.

-- The net force on the foot is zero ... 500N from the leg, pointing forward,
and 500N as the reaction force from the ball, pointing backward. 

That's how the leg's speed remains constant ... creating a dent in the ball
until the ball accelerates to match the speed of the foot, and then drawing
out of the dent, as the ball accelerates to exceed the speed of the foot and
draw away from it.


What would happen if a rocket ran out of fuel in the Earth's atmosphere?

Answers

It would do exactly what a rock or a frisbee does when you toss it.

After the engines cut off, it couldn't get any more energy from
anywhere, and after that, as it pushed air aside to get through,
and had air molecules scraping against it, those would slowly
rob kinetic energy from it.  Sooner or later it would run out of
kinetic energy, start falling, and it would eventually make either
a big 'SPLOOSH' or else a big 'CRUNCH', depending on exactly
where it returned to Earth's surface.
The rocket would fall back down to the surface of earth because there would be nothing propelling it upwards.

How do liquid water, ice, and water vapor differ from each other?

Answers

They are made of different states of matter.
Liquid water is a liquidIce is a solidWater vapour is a gas

The net force acting on a 50 kg crate is 0 N. What is the crate's acceleration

Answers

Force = mass * acceleration

So, 0 = 50 * a

a = 0

A rock is at the top of a 20 meter tall hill. The rock has a mass of 10kg. How much potential energy does it have?

Answers

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-Brainly support team (Klara academic DEPT.)Spam words mean team is having trouble determining the question CONTACT For support.

Answer:

2000 Joules

Explanation:

The mass of a cm3(cube) stone is 180.a) calculate its density.
                                                             b) The stone is broken into two peaces. What is the                                                                      density of each piece.
                                                             c) The smaller piece weights 80g. Calculate its                                                                               Volume.

Answers


 Density = (mass) / (volume), no matter how large or small the sample is.

We can't calculate the density, because you left out the number for the volume.
Also, you didn't tell us the unit for the mass of 180.

a).  If the mass is 180 grams, then the density is 

                               (180 gm) / (volume) .

b).  No matter how many pieces you crush it into, and
no matter how large or small a piece is, its density is
the same.  (I just wish we knew what the density really is.)

c).  A piece may have 80 grams of mass.  It doesn't "weigh" 80 grams.

Since the density of the whole rock is  (180 gm) / (volume),
the density of any piece of it is  (180 gm) / (volume).

Multiply each side by (volume):   (Density) x (volume) = 180 gm

Divide each side by (density):        Volume = (180 gm) / (density)

We can't calculate the volume of an 80-gm piece, because
we don't know the density.  (That's because you left the volume
out of the question.)