What is a travelling wave and a standing wave? What are the differences between both of them?
Answer: First of all we have to understand that a traveling wave is an organized disturbance traveling with a well defined wave speed. On the other hand standing waves are the combination of period waves with their reflected waves creating double sided waves. The differences between them is that standing waves have nodes and antinodes while a traveling wave does not.
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Answer:
16.96 W
Explanation:
Power: This can be defined as the rate at which work is done by an object. The S.I unit of power is Watt(W).
From the question,
P = (F×d)/t....................... Equation 1
Where P = power, F = force, d = distance, t = time.
Given: F = 75 N, d = 42 m, t = 3.1 min = 3.1×60 = 186 s
Substitute these values into equation 1
P = (75×42)/186
P = 16.94 W
Hence the average power delivered by the child = 16.96 W
Answer:
Yes
Explanation:
Any transparent surface in practical is neither a perfect absorber of electromagnetic waves neither a perfect reflector. Generally all the transparent surfaces reflect some amount of irradiation and the other parts are absorbed and transmitted.
<u>That is given by as relation:</u>
where:
absorptivity which is defined as the ratio of the absorbed radiation to the total irradiation
reflectivity is defined as the ratio of reflected radiation to the total irradiation
transmittivity is defined as the ratio of total transmitted radiation to the total irradiation
A Framework for K–12 Science Education: Practices, Crosscutting Concepts, and Core Ideas (Framework) recommends science education in grades K–12 be built around three major dimensions: science and engineering practices, crosscutting concepts that unify the study of science and engineering through their common application across fields, and core ideas in the major disciplines of natural science.