Answer:
The water is 1310.75 meters deep.
Explanation:
The question gives us the speed of sound and the time the sonar signal takes to travel to the bottom of the water and back.
To find out the distance, we should first divide the time in half, so we only consider the time taken for the sound to reach the bottom of the water body.
This means:
Time = 1.75 / 2 = 0.875 seconds
The distance traveled in this time is:
Distance = Speed * Time
Distance = 1498 * 0.875
Distance = 1310.75 meters
Thus, the water is 1310.75 meters deep.
Answer:
Found this off of google, "When you inflate the balloon, the dots slowly move away from each other because the rubber stretches in the space between them. ... This stretching of space, which causes the distance between galaxies to increase, is what astronomers mean by the expansion of the Universe."
Hmm that's a tuff one let me think
Answer:
<em>The balloon is 66.62 m high</em>
Explanation:
<u>Combined Motion
</u>
The problem has a combination of constant-speed motion and vertical launch. The hot-air balloon is rising at a constant speed of 14 m/s. When the camera is dropped, it initially has the same speed as the balloon (vo=14 m/s). The camera has an upward movement for some time until it runs out of speed. Then, it falls to the ground. The height of an object that was launched from an initial height yo and speed vo is
The values are
We must find the values of t such that the height of the camera is 0 (when it hits the ground)
Multiplying by 2
Clearing the coefficient of
Plugging in the given values, we reach to a second-degree equation
The equation has two roots, but we only keep the positive root
Once we know the time of flight of the camera, we use it to know the height of the balloon. The balloon has a constant speed vr and it already was 15 m high, thus the new height is
Answer:
= 1.9792 × 10^10
Significant Figures= 5
Explanation:
Look at the attachment below
Hope this helps (: