The electric current passing through the bulb would be 3.3A
<u>Explanation:</u>
Given:
Electric charge, q = 800C
Time, t = 4 min
= 4 X 60 sec
= 240 sec
Electric current, I = ?
We know,
On substituting the value we get:
Thus, the electric current passing through the bulb would be 3.3A
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
There are so many planets out there that there must be habitable planets if not in our galaxy but the Universe.
Although the chances of advanced life are slim, small primitive life like microbes or sea life may still exist.
Answer:
Explanation:
The heaviside function is defined as:
so we see that the Heaviside function "switches on" when, and remains switched on when
If we want our heaviside function to switch on when , we need the argument to the heaviside function to be 0 when
Thus we define a function f:
The term inside the heaviside function makes sure to displace the function 5 units to the right.
Now we just need to add a scale up factor of 240 V, because thats the voltage applied after the heaviside function switches on. ( when , so it becomes just a 1, which we can safely ignore.)
Therefore our final result is:
I have made a sketch for you, and added it as attachment.
<span>The initial velocity of the bike was 1.67 (vf)m/s. This is found by evaluating 7.5/4.5 which yields the velocity per unit of time which is equivalent to initial velocity.</span>
"60 kg" is not a weight. It's a mass, and it's always the same
no matter where the object goes.
The weight of the object is
(mass) x (gravity in the place where the object is) .
On the surface of the Earth,
Weight = (60 kg) x (9.8 m/s²)
= 588 Newtons.
Now, the force of gravity varies as the inverse of the square of the distance from the center of the Earth.
On the surface, the distance from the center of the Earth is 1R.
So if you move out to 5R from the center, the gravity out there is
(1R/5R)² = (1/5)² = 1/25 = 0.04 of its value on the surface.
The object's weight would also be 0.04 of its weight on the surface.
(0.04) x (588 Newtons) = 23.52 Newtons.
Again, the object's mass is still 60 kg out there.
___________________________________________
If you have a textbook, or handout material, or a lesson DVD,
or a teacher, or an on-line unit, that says the object "weighs"
60 kilograms, then you should be raising a holy stink.
You are being planted with sloppy, inaccurate, misleading
information, and it's going to be YOUR problem to UN-learn it later.
They owe you better material.