Answer:
False because it has no mass.
Explanation:
Answer:
(a) the force is 8.876 N
(b) the magnitude of each charge is 4.085 μC
Explanation:
Part (a)
Given;
coulomb's constant, K = 8.99 x 10⁹ N.m²/C²
distance between two charges, r = 10 cm = 0.1 m
force between the two charges, F = 15 N
when the distance between the charges changes to 13 cm (0.13 m)
force between the two charges, F = ?
Apply Coulomb's law;
Part (b)
the magnitude of each charge, if they have equal magnitude
where;
F is the force between the charges
K is Coulomb's constant
Q is the charge
r is the distance between the charges
Answer:
A factor of 2*4 = 8
Explanation:
F_g = (G*m1*m2)/r^2
where m1 and m2 are the two masses, G is Newton's gravitational constant, and r is the distance between the center of mass of the two objects.
So, if you double m1 and quadruple m2:
m1' = 2*m1
m2' = 4*m2
Then F_g' = (G*m1'*m2')/r^2 = (G*2*m1*4*m2)/r^2 = 8*(G*m1*m2)/r^2 = 8*F_g
The first sentence got me all psyched up to answer the question "What
horizontal force do the engines generate in order to accelerate it ?".
But the actual question, in the second sentence, turned out to be
a completely different one.
When the plane levels off and continues on at a constant altitude, it's
not accelerating up or down, so the net vertical force on it is zero.
The lift generated by the wings is exactly balancing the downward
force of gravity on the airplane.