Answer:
e.)At twice the distance, the strength of the field is E/4.
Explanation:
The strength of the electric field at a certain distance from a point charge is given by:
where
k is the Coulomb's constant
Q is the charge
r is the distance from the point charge
In this problem, the distance from the point charge is doubled:
r' = 2r
So the new electric field strength is
so, at twice the distance the strength of the field is E/4.
Answer:
You have the answer in your comments. I will be copying it so your question doesn't get deleted.
The answers is $0.58
$11.48
the video tape
the new shirt
Answer: Energy consumption and sustainability is important so that it remain available for future generation.
Explanation:
1. The home furnaces are likely to require fuel like coal, which will directly emit carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide gases. These should be replaced with the electrical furnaces. The old or more power consuming air conditioners should be replaced with new ones.
2. The water heaters should be tankless so their capacity to heat more water could be possible. The water heaters should be electricity saving.
3. Washer and dryers should be water savy and electricity savy. A front-loading washing machine is useful energy saver.
4. The LED lights are more electricity saving than conventional bulbs. Halogen lights are also electricity saving.
A pendulum is not a wave.
-- A pendulum doesn't have a 'wavelength'.
-- There's no way to define how many of its "waves" pass a point
every second.
-- Whatever you say is the speed of the pendulum, that speed
can only be true at one or two points in the pendulum's swing,
and it's different everywhere else in the swing.
-- The frequency of a pendulum depends only on the length
of the string from which it hangs.
If you take the given information and try to apply wave motion to it:
Wave speed = (wavelength) x (frequency)
Frequency = (speed) / (wavelength) ,
you would end up with
Frequency = (30 meter/sec) / (0.35 meter) = 85.7 Hz
Have you ever seen anything that could be described as
a pendulum, swinging or even wiggling back and forth
85 times every second ? ! ? That's pretty absurd.
This math is not applicable to the pendulum.