When you run, your nose is moving in a straight line relative to a stone on the ground, and it's also moving back and forth relative to your left foot. But it's at rest relative to your ear.
Answer:
Work done = 0.3142 Nm
Explanation:
Mass of Object is 50 g
Circular path of radius is 10 cm ⇒ 0.1 m
Work done = Force × Distance = ?
*Distance moved (circular path) ⇒ Circumference of the circular path
2πr = 2 × 3.142 × 0.1 ⇒ 0.6284 m
*Force that is enough to move a 50 g must be equal or more than its weight.
therefore convert 50 grams to newton = 0.5 N
Recall that; work done is force times distance
∴ 0.5 N × 0.6284 m
Work done = 0.3142 Nm
When solid material expands in response to an increase in temperature (thermal expansion), it can increase in length in a process known as linear expansion. for an example application of expansion and contraction.
examples =
(1) Changing of shape and dimensions of objects such as doors.
(2) Wall collapsing due to bulging.
(3) Cracking of glass tumbler due to heating.
(4) Bursting of metal pipes carrying hot water or steam are some of the disadvantages of thermal expansion of matter.
Answer:
Explanation:
Recall the formula for acceleration:
, where is final velocity, is initial velocity, and is elapsed time (change in velocity over this amount of time).
Let's look at our time vs velocity graph. At t=0 seconds, V=25 m/s. So her initial velocity is 25 m/s.
We want to find the acceleration during the first 5 seconds of motion. Well, looking at our graph, at t=5 seconds, isn't our velocity still 25 m/s? Therefore, final velocity is 25 m/s (for this period of 5 seconds).
We are only looking from t=0 seconds to t=5 seconds which is a total period of 5 seconds. Therefore, elapsed time is 5 seconds.
Substituting values in our formula, we have:
Alternative:
Without even worrying about plugging in numbers, let's think about what acceleration actually is! Acceleration is the change in velocity over a certain period of time. If we are not changing our velocity at all, we aren't accelerating! In the graph, we can see that we have a straight line from t=0 seconds to t=5 seconds, the interval we are worried about. This indicates that our velocity is staying the same! At t=0 seconds, we have a velocity of 25 m/s and that velocity stays the same until t=5 seconds. Even though we are moving, we haven't changed velocity, which means our average acceleration is zero!