Will give Brainliest Physical data is often used in the court system. In fact, police officers use radar to determine your speed when you are driving and admit that record in court if you are ever given a ticket. In one such instance, the police officer submitted data that goes against the claim of the driver, who is contesting his ticket in court. The police officer (who was stationary when he made the measure) claims that the driver was speeding at 44.7 m/s, but the driver claims he was only going 26.8 m/s (according to his speedometer). The speed limit was 60 mph. The driver argues that the radar gun must have been set incorrectly to record relative velocity. It is possible that they are both telling the truth? In a separate word processing document, prepare two expert witness scripts, one to support the driver and one to support the police officer. Use visual aids (drawings and calculations) to show evidence for both arguments.
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If you mix chlorine lithium and nickel together which two elements would be the most reactive
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How much work would a child do while puling a 12-kg wagon a distance of 3m with a 22 n force directed 30 degrees with respect to the horizontal? (a) 82j (b) 52j (c) 109j (d) 95j
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Physics, 22.06.2019 18:30
Suppose you plot the distance traveled by an object at various times and you discover that the graph is not a straight line. what does this indicate about the object's acceleration?
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Physical data is often used in the court system. In fact, police officers use...
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