Answer:
(a)
(b)
Solution:
As per the question:
Side of the cube, a = 4.4 cm
Coordinates of the diagonally opposite corner, A = <4.4, 4.4, 4.4> cm
Now,
(a) To calculate the unit vector:
(b) To calculate the angle between the two vectors say A and A' is given by:
(1)
Now,
The coordinates of the diagonally opposite corner, A' is <0, 0, 1> cm
Thus
Now,
Using equation (1) :
Thus
You can use apple cider vinegar. If you don't have it, you can go to shoppers drug mart and they will have an ointment to sooth itches.
The question is missing a diagram of the ray reflection. I attached a diagram which comes from a similar question in the answer section. The full question should be as follows:
Two plane mirrors intersect at right angles. A laser beam strikes the first of them at a point d = 10.0cmfrom their point of intersection, as shown in the figure. For what angle of incidence at the first mirror will this ray strike the midpoint of the second mirror (which is s=29.0cm long) after reflecting from the first mirror?
Answer:
34.6°
Explanation:
To strike the midpoint of the second mirror, the ray light will have to travel half of the distance vertically
i.e. 29/2 = 14.5
We can solve this through trigonometry.
Let the angle between the ray and the vertical plane mirror is known as α
tan α = 10/14.5
α = = 34.6°
The angle of incidence is the angle between the ray and the normal line of the mirror.
Let angle of incidence of first mirror be β
β = α = 34.6
Answer: find the answer in the explanation
Explanation:
The capillarity of water molecules is different from the mercury molecules.
What is capillarity ?
This is the tendency of a liquid substance to rise in a capillary tube.
Molecules water rises up in a harrow tubes because of the force of adhesion between the water molecules and the tube molecules is greater than the force of cohesion between the water molecules. This helps water to wet the tube and rise. While mercury which is also a liquid falls in a narrow tubes to level below the outside surface because the force of cohesion between the mercury molecules is greater than the force of adhesion between the mercury molecules and the tube molecules. Mercury does not wet.