Answer: The correct answer is "No".
Explanation:
Gravity: It is the force which causes object to fall on the earth. It is the force which attracts bodies towards each other.
Potential difference: It is defined as the potential acting between the two points. The work done in moving the unit positive charge from one location to the another location.
The potential difference in battery is caused by the electrodes. There are two terminals in battery: Negative terminal which is at lower potential and Positive terminal which is at higher potential. It forces the electrons to flow in the circuit which constitutes the current.
The gravity and the potential difference have no relation between them.
Therefore, gravity have no effect on the potential difference of a battery.
As long as all the waves stay in the same medium, the intensity of
any waves ... electromagnetic or mechanical ... decrease in proportion
to the square of the distance.
If the distance increases to 3 x the original distance, then the intensity
changes to 1/3² or 1/9 of the original intensity.
I suppose choice-'d' is the correct one, but I have to tell you that
the phrase "nine times as low" is mathematically meaningless,
and it really grinds my gears.
When astronauts travel to the moon, their bodies experience a lower gravitational pull than on Earth, the type of force they are experiencing is <span>A. tension. Tension is the opposite of compression which is pulling of the astronaut from the ground or Earth</span>
As change is velocity is
<span>Δv=<span>10 m s<span>−1</span></span>−<span>2 m s<span>−1</span></span>=<span>8 m s<span>−1</span></span></span>
and time taken is 3 seconds so acceleration is
<span>acceleration=<span>change in velocitychange in time</span></span>
So
<span>a=<span><span>8 m s<span>−1</span></span>3 s</span>=<span>2.7 m s<span>−<span>2</span></span></span></span>