Answer:
233.1 miles per hours
Explanation:
Speed: This is defined as the ratio of distance to time. The S.I unit of speed is m/s. speed is a vector quantity because it can only be represented by magnitude only. Mathematically, speed can be expressed as,
S = d/t ....................... Equation 1
Where S = speed of the runner, d = distance covered, t = time.
Given: d = 100 meter , t = 9.580 seconds
Conversion:
If, 1 meter = 0.00062 miles
Then, 100 meters = (0.00062×100) miles = 0.62 miles.
Also
If, 3600 s = 1 h
Then, 9.580 s = (1×9.580)/3600 = 0.00266 hours.
Substitute into equation 1
S = 0.62/0.00266
S = 233.1 miles per hours.
Hence the runner speed is 233.1 miles per hours
Answer:
His average speed is 980 units
An impact which stops a moving object must do enough work to take away its kinetic energy, so extending the distance moved during the collision reduces the impact force.
The answer is,
<u>Farthest from the axis of rotation</u>
Please rate <u>Brainliest</u> (:
Answer:
Tidal heating
Explanation:
Tidal force is the ability of a massive body to produce tides on another body. The tidal force depends on the mass of the body that produces the tides and the distance between the two bodies.
Tidal forces can cause the destruction of a satellite that orbits a planet or a comet that is too close to the Sun or a planet. When the orbiting body crosses the "Roche boundary", the tidal forces along the body are more intense than the cohesion forces that hold the body together.
Tidal friction is the force between the Earth's oceans and ocean floors caused by the gravitational attraction of the Moon. The Earth tries to transport the waters of the oceans with it, while the Moon tries to keep them under it and on the opposite side of the Earth. In the long term, tidal friction causes the Earth's rotation speed to decrease, thus shortening the day. In turn, the Moon increases its angular momentum and gradually spirals away from Earth. Finally, when the day equals the orbital period of the Moon (which will be about 40 times the length of the current day), the process will cease. Subsequently, a new process will begin when the power to raise tides from the Sun takes angular momentum from the Earth-Moon system. The Moon will then spiral towards Earth until it is destroyed when it enters the "Roche boundary."
<u>Tidal heating
</u>
It is the warming caused by the tidal action on a planet or satellite. The most important example of tidal heating in the Solar System is the effect of Jupiter on its Io satellite, in which the tidal effects produce such high temperatures that the interior of the satellite melts, producing volcanism.