How do you do this problem? I started it but I’m not sure how to do the rest.
How do you do this problem? I started it but - 1

Answers

Answer 1
Answer:

Answer:

84.9°

Explanation:

You correctly found the acceleration and the net force in the x direction.  Now write the net force as the sum of the x components of the individual forces.

∑F = F₁ + F₂ cos θ

3.6 = 2.8 + 9.0 cos θ

0.8 = 9.0 cos θ

0.0889 = cos θ

θ = ±84.9°

F₂ is either 84.9° above the x-axis or below the x-axis.


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As a change of state is occurring, the temperature of the system does not change. a. True
b. False

Answers

False. The temperature would change between the change of states. 

this would be true.


A concave mirror has a radius of curvature of 10 cm. Find the location an height of the image if the distance of the object is 8cm and the height of the object is 1.5 cm, using a scaled ray diagram

Answers

R=10
F=R/2
F=10/2=5
F=-5(CONCAVE MIRROR)
U=-8(CONCAVE MIRROR)
HEIGHT OF OBJECT=1.5
V=?
HEIGHT OF IMAGE=?
I/F=1/U+1/V
-I/5=-1/8-1/V
-1/V=-1/5+1/8
-1/V=-8+5/40
-1/V=-3/40
1/V=3/40
V=40/3

HEIGHT OF IMAGE/HEIGHT OF OBJECT =-V/U
HEIGHT OF IMAGE=40/3*1/-8*15/10
                              =-20/8
                              =-2.5

The car salesman tells you that the car can go from a stopped position to 60 miles per hour in 6 seconds. He is giving you the car's rate of

Answers

he is giving you the car rate speed 

A change in which property of light will have no effect on whether or not the photoelectric effect occurs??? Frequently energy intensity and wavelength

Answers

The intensity of the light has no connection with the photoelectric effect.

That's what was so baffling about it before the particle nature of light
was suspected ... a match with a blue flame might stimulate the
photoelectric effect, but a high-power red searchlight couldn't do it.

Answer: intensity

Explanation:

What is the highest degrees above the horizon the moon ever gets during the year in the Yakima Valley ?

Answers


The trickiest part of this problem was making sure where the Yakima Valley is.
OK so it's generally around the city of the same name in Washington State.

Just for a place to work with, I picked the Yakima Valley Junior College, at the
corner of W Nob Hill Blvd and S16th Ave in Yakima.  The latitude in the middle
of that intersection is 46.585° NorthThat's the number we need.

Here's how I would do it:

-- The altitude of the due-south point on the celestial equator is always
(90° - latitude), no matter what the date or time of day.

-- The highest above the celestial equator that the ecliptic ever gets
is about 23.5°. 

-- The mean inclination of the moon's orbit to the ecliptic is 5.14°, so
that's the highest above the ecliptic that the moon can ever appear
in the sky.

This sets the limit of the highest in the sky that the moon can ever appear.

90° - 46.585° + 23.5° + 5.14° = 72.1° above the horizon .

That doesn't happen regularly.  It would depend on everything coming
together at the same time ... the moon happens to be at the point in its
orbit that's 5.14° above ==> (the point on the ecliptic that's 23.5° above
the celestial equator).

Depending on the time of year, that can be any time of the day or night.

The most striking combination is at midnight, within a day or two of the
Winter solstice, when the moon happens to be full.

In general, the Full Moon closest to the Winter solstice is going to be
the moon highest in the sky.  Then it's going to be somewhere near
67° above the horizon at midnight.


You travel 20.0 mph for 0.500 hour, 40.0 mph for 1.00 hour, 30.0 mph for 0.500 hour, and 50.0 mph for 2.00 hours. What is the total distance traveled?

Answers

Speed is (distance)/(time), so because you already know the time(.5 + 1 + .5 + 2 = 4 hours), you want to find the distance traveled.
(Speed)/(time) = ((distance)/(time))/(time)=(distance)/((time)/(time))=distance
So you set it up like this:
(20mph)/(.5\ hour)= 10 miles \n (40mph)/(1\ hour)= 40 miles\n (30mph)/(.5\ hour)= 15miles\n (50mph)/(2\ hours)=100miles \n Add\ them:\n 10+40+15+100=165miles
You traveled 165 miles total.