Answer
given,
cooling fan revolution = 850 rev/min
fan turns before revolution = 1500 revolutions
θ = 1500 revolution
θ = 1500 x 2 x π
θ = 9424.78 rad
a) using equation of rotation
ω² = ω₀² + 2 α θ
ω = 0 because body comes to rest
0 = 89² + 2 x α x 9424.78
α = -0.42 rad/s²
b) time take for the fan to stop
ω = ω₀ + α t
0 = 89 - 0.42 t
t = 211.9 s
Answer:
86 turns
Explanation:
Parameters given:
Magnetic torque, τ = 1.7 * 10^(-2) Nm
Area of coil, A = 9 * 10^(-4) m²
Current in coil, I = 1.1 A
Magnetic field, B = 0.2 T
The magnetic toque is given mathematically as:
τ = N * I * A * B
Where N = number of turns
To find the number of turns, we make N subject of formula:
N = τ/(I * A * B)
Therefore:
N = (1.7 * 10^(-2)) / (1.1 * 9 * 10^(-4) * 0.2)
N = 85.85 = 86 turns (whole number)
The number of turns must be 86.
A solar eclipse occurs when the moon crosses in front of the Sun, blocking some or all of its rays. A lunar eclipse happens when the moon is directly behind the earth, blocking the moon from receiving light. The only light comes from the light on earth's reflected shadow.
You can look at a lunar eclipse because there is very little light or none at all. You can't look at a solar eclipse because you are looking directly at the sun unless it is complete. Before totality, only some of the Sun is blocked, causing your pupils dilate to let in more light. Since they do this, more of the Sun's rays can be let in to the eye, which effectively allows your eyes to burn.
Some doctors and eye care specialists say that after someone complains of blindness after looking at a solar eclipse unaided, they can see what the Sun and moon looked like at the time that they looked at it, as it is burned onto their retinas.
Answer:
“We have a brain for one reason and one reason only, and that's to produce adaptable and complex movements,” stated Wolpert, Director of the Computational and Biological Learning Lab at the University of Cambridge. ... The evidence for this is in how well we've learned to mimic our movements using computers and robots.
Easy !
Take any musical instrument with strings ... a violin, a guitar, etc.
The length of the vibrating part of the strings doesn't change ...
it's the distance from the 'bridge' to the 'nut'.
Pluck any string. Then, slightly twist the tuning peg for that string,
and pluck the string again.
Twisting the peg only changed the string's tension; the length
couldn't change.
-- If you twisted the peg in the direction that made the string slightly
tighter, then your second pluck had a higher pitch than your first one.
-- If you twisted the peg in the direction that made the string slightly
looser, then your second pluck had a lower pitch than the first one.