The focal length of a magnifying glass is the distance between the focal point and optical centre of the magnifying glass.
<h3>Focal length</h3>
The focal length, f is the distance from a lens or mirror to the focal point, F.
This is the distance from a lens or mirror at which parallel light rays will meet for a converging lens or mirror or appear to diverge from for a diverging lens or mirror.
A magnifying glass is a converging lens which produces a enlarged, erect and virtual image when an object is placed between the focal point and optical centre.
A magnifying glass will bring to focus at a point sun rays which can cause the paper to catch fire if it is held in place for long.
This point at which the most concentrated ray of light is shining on the paper, is the focal point for that magnifying glass.
Therefore, the focal length of a magnifying glass is the distance between the focal point and optical centre of the magnifying glass.
Learn more about about focal length at: brainly.com/question/25779311
Nitric acid (NHO3) because plants need nitrogen to survive, hope this helped.
By putting to much weight on it our body causing it to hurt or fall hope this helps
This is the Doppler effect.
1. As the sound leaves the horn the sound waves are at first close to each other and as they move outwards they become further apart. The closer the sound waves are the louder the noise.
As the car gets the closer the sound waves get closer, so the horn becomes louder.
2. As the horn moves away, the sound waves become less frequent, causing the pitch to get lower.
Answer:
4 m/s^2
Explanation:
The acceleration is defined as: Δv/Δt (the difference of the velocity over a time period in which happens that difference).
Remember that a difference is calculated by subtracting the initial value of a physical quantity from its final value.
In our case:
Δv = Vfinal - Vinitial = 36m/s - 0 m/s = 36m/s
Δt = 9s
a = Δv/Δt = 36m/s / 9s = 4m/s^2