Answer:
13 meters
Explanation:
Step one:
given
We are told that Nathalie leaves a history classroom and walks 3 meters North
Then travels another 10 meters south to an art classroom.
Required
The total distance.
Step two:
The total distance can be computed by summing up the 3 meter North distance traveled and the 10 meter south distance traveled
Total distance= 3+10= 13meters
At t =0, the velocity of A is greater than the velocity of B.
We are told in the question that the spacecrafts fly parallel to each other and that for the both spacecrafts, the velocities are described as follows;
A: vA (t) = ť^2 – 5t + 20
B: vB (t) = t^2+ 3t + 10
Given that t = 0 in both cases;
vA (0) = 0^2 – 5(0) + 20
vA = 20 m/s
For vB
vB (0) = 0^2+ 3(0) + 10
vB = 10 m/s
We can see that at t =0, the velocity of A is greater than the velocity of B.
Learn more: brainly.com/question/24857760
Read each question carefully. Show all your work for each part of the question. The parts within the question may not have equal weight. Spacecrafts A and B are flying parallel to each other through space and are next to each other at time t= 0. For the interval 0 <t< 6 s, spacecraft A's velocity v A and spacecraft B's velocity vB as functions of t are given by the equations va (t) = ť^2 – 5t + 20 and VB (t) = t^2+ 3t + 10, respectively, where both velocities are in units of meters per second. At t = 6 s, the spacecrafts both turn off their engines and travel at a constant speed. (a) At t = 0, is the speed of spacecraft A greater than, less than, or equal to the speed of spacecraft B?
Answer:
diminished and erect( upright)
Explanation:
Answer:
- Newton's first law applies. An object at rest will stay that way until a force is applied.
- Any amount of effort can be applied to any amount of mass (in the ideal case). The question is not sufficiently specific.
Explanation:
A force is required to move an object because the object will stay at rest until a force is applied.
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The effort required to lift or push two masses instead of one depends on the desired effect. For the same kinetic energy, no more effort is required. For the same momentum, half the effort is required for two masses. For the same velocity, double the effort is required.