Answer: option A. strong nuclear force.
Explanation:
The diagram shows the subatomic particles inside the nucelous: protons and neutrons.
As you know, the protons are positively charged partilces inside the nucleous.
Being those particles charged with the same kind of charge they experiment electrostatic repulsion. So, how do you explain that they can stand together in such small space as it is the nucleous?
The responsible of keeping the subatomic particles together is the so called strong nuclear force.
Strong nuclear force or simply strong force is one of the four fundamental interactions or forces: i) gravitational, ii) electromagnetic, iii) weak nuclear force, and iv) strong nuclear force.
Strong nuclear force is the strongest force of nature and acts only in short distances as those inside the nucleous and is responsible for both the atraction among quarks and the atraction among protons to bind them together inside the atomic nucleous.
Answer:
elements in the same column have the same number of neutrons. elements with similar mass are placed in the same column.
Answer:
Convergent.
Explanation:
Just as oceanic crust is formed at mid-ocean ridges, it is destroyed in subduction zones. Subduction is the important geologic process in which a tectonic plate made of dense lithospheric material melts or falls below a plate made of less-dense lithosphere at a convergent plate boundary.
Answer:
95 %
99.7 %
Explanation:
= 166 cm = Mean
= 5 cm = Standard deviation
a) 156 cm and 176 cm
From the empirical rule 95% of all values are within 2 standard deviation of the mean, so about 95% of men are between 156 cm and 176 cm.
b) 151 cm and 181 cm
The empirical rule tells us that about 99.7% of all values are within 3 standard deviations of the mean, so about 99.7% of men are between 151 cm and 181 cm.
Answer:
(a)
(b)
Explanation:
mass, m = 2.3 kg
vx = 40 m/s
vy = 75 m/s
(a) Angular momentum is given by
Where, p is the linear momentum and r is the position vector about which the angular momentum is calculated.
Here,
So, the angular momentum
(b) Here,