Answers: 2
Physics, 21.06.2019 23:00
Follow these directions and answer the questions. 1. set up the ripple tank as in previous investigations. 2. bend the rubber tube to form a "concave mirror" and place in the ripple tank. the water level must be below the top of the hose. 3. generate a few straight pulses with the dowel and observe the reflected waves. do the waves focus (come together) upon reflection? can you locate the place where the waves meet? 4. touch the water surface where the waves converged. what happens to the reflected wave? 5. move your finger twice that distance from the hose (2f = c of c, center of the curvature) and touch the water again. does the image (the reflected wave) appear in the same location (c of c)? you may have to experiment before you find the exact location. sometimes it is hard to visualize with the ripple tank because the waves move so quickly. likewise, it is impossible to "see" light waves because they have such small wavelengths and move at the speed of light. however, both are examples of transverse waves and behave in the same way when a parallel wave fronts hit a curved surface.
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Physics, 23.06.2019 07:00
If you drive 12 miles north and 35 miles east, what is the direct distance between you and your starting point?
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Physics, 23.06.2019 11:00
The safe load, l, of a wooden beam of width w, height h, and length l, supported at both ends, varies directly as the product of the width and the square of the height, and inversely as the length. a wooden beam 4 inches wide, 9 inches high, and 240 inches long can hold a load of 6810 pounds. what load would a beam 3 inches wide, 8 inches high, and 144 inches long, of the same material, support? (round off your answer to the nearest integer.)
Answers: 1
Describe each object that you hit. What is its shape and what is it made of? Then describe how it so...
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