Explain why the moon is always half illuminated and half dark no matter where it is in the lunar cycle.
1 answer:
The easiest way I know to explain it is this:
-- Take a flashlight and a ball into a dark room.
-- Turn on the flashlight and point it at the ball.
-- Half of the ball is lighted up by the flashlight, and the other half is dark.
-- There is no way you can turn or twist the ball to make more or less
than 50% of it lighted up and more or less than 50% of it dark.
<em>Everything</em> in the solar system ... as long as it's shaped like a ball ... is
half illuminated by the sun and half dark.
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1.62 m/s²
Explanation:
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I hope this helps :)
\Delta L= \alpha L_0 (T_f-T_i)
= (18 x 10^-6 /°C)(0.125 m)(100° C - 200 °C)
= -0.00225 m
New length = L + ΔL
= 1.25 m + (-0.00225 m)
= 1.248
So your answer is B.
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30 miles
Explanation:
<u>Step 1:</u>
Divide -> 45/60= .75 miles/minute
<u>Step 2:</u>
Multiply -> .75 x 40= 30