Answer:
m = B²qR² / 2 V
Explanation:
If v be the velocity after acceleration under potential difference of V
kinetic energy = loss of electric potential energy
1/2 m v² = Vq ,
v² = 2 Vq / m ----------------------- ( 1 )
In magnetic field , charged particle comes in circular motion in which magnetic force provides centripetal force
magnetic force = centripetal force
Bqv = mv² / R
v = BqR / m
v² = B²q²R² / m² ------------------------- (2)
from (1) and (2)
B²q²R² / m² = 2 Vq / m
m = B²q²R² / 2 Vq
m = B²qR² / 2 V
Answer:
Technician A is right.
Explanation:
Given that,
Voltage of circuit, V = 12 volt
Current in the circuit, I = 3 A
Technician A says the electric power in this circuit is 36 watts. Technician B says the electric power in this circuit is 4 watts. We need to say that which technician is correct.
The power of any circuit is given by :
P = 36 watts
So, technician A is right. Hence, this is the required solution.
The so-called "terminal velocity" is the fastest that something can fall
through a fluid. Even though there's a constant force pulling it through,
the friction or resistance of plowing through the surrounding substance
gets bigger as the speed grows, so there's some speed where the resistance
is equal to the pulling force, and then the falling object can't go any faster.
A few examples:
-- the terminal velocity of a sky-diver falling through air,
-- the terminal velocity of a pecan falling through honey,
-- the terminal velocity of a stone falling through water.
It's not possible to say that "the terminal velocity is ----- miles per hour".
If any of these things changes, then the terminal velocity changes too:
-- weight of the falling object
-- shape of the object
-- surface texture (smoothness) of the object
-- density of the surrounding fluid
-- viscosity of the surrounding fluid .
Speed of wave is given as
Wavelength of the wave is given as
now from the formula of wave time period we can say
so it will have time period of T = 4 s
Yes, an increase in temperature is accompanied by an increase in pressure. Temperature is the measurement of heat present and more heat means more energy. Molecules in hotter temperatures move faster and more often, eventually moving into the gaseous phase. The molecules would fill the container, and the hotter it got the more they would bounce off the walls, pushing outward, increasing the pressure.
I suppose you could measure this with some kind of loosely inflated balloon and subject it to different temperatures and then somehow measure the size/pressure of it.