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Svetach [21]
2 years ago
11

The severity of a fall depends on your speed when you strike the ground. All factors but the acceleration from gravity being the

same, how many times higher could a safe fall occur on the Moon than on Earth (gravitational acceleration on the Moon is about one-sixth that of the Earth)?
Physics
1 answer:
Diano4ka-milaya [45]2 years ago
6 0

Answer:

<em>The object could fall from six times the original height and still be safe</em>

Explanation:

<u>Free Falling</u>

When an object is released from rest in free air (no friction), the motion is completely dependant on the acceleration of gravity g.

If we drop an object of mass m near the Earth surface from a height h, it has initial mechanical energy of

U=m.g.h

When the object strikes the ground, all the mechanical energy (only potential energy) becomes into kinetic energy

\displaystyle K=\frac{1}{2}m.v^2

Where v is the speed just before hitting the ground

If we know the speed v is safe for the integrity of the object, then we can know the height it was dropped from

\displaystyle m.g.h=\frac{1}{2}m.v^2

Solving for h

\displaystyle h=\frac{m.v^2}{2mg}=\frac{v^2}{2g}

If the drop had occurred in the Moon, then

\displaystyle h_M=\frac{v_M^2}{2g_M}

Where hM, vM and gM are the corresponding parameters on the Moon. We know v is the safe hitting speed and the gravitational acceleration on the Moon is g_M=1/6 g

\displaystyle h_M=\frac{v^2}{2\frac{1}{6}g}

\displaystyle h_M=6\frac{v^2}{2g}=6h

This means the object could fall from six times the original height and still be safe

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Answer:

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Partial pressure of H2 = (mass of H2/total mass of gas mixture) × pressure of sealed container = 1/4 × 1.5 = 0.375 atm

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Assuming that the length of the magnet is much smaller than the separation between it and the charge. As a result of magnetic interaction (i.e., ignore pure Coulomb forces) between the charge and the bar magnet, the magnet will not experience any torque at all - option A

Explanation:

Assuming that the length of the magnet is much smaller than the separation between it and the charge. As a result of magnetic interaction (i.e., ignore pure Coulomb forces) between the charge and the bar magnet, the magnet will not experience any torque at all; the reason being that: no magnetic field is being produced by a charge that is static. Only a moving charge can produce a magnetic effect. And the magnet can not have any torque due to its own magnetic lines of force.

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A well-greased, essentially frictionless, metal bowl has the shape of a hemisphere of radius 0.150 m. You place a pat of butter
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Answer:

v = 1.71 m/s

Explanation:

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