answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Gnesinka [82]
2 years ago
12

Two red blood cells each have a mass of 9.05×10−14 kg and carry a negative charge spread uniformly over their surfaces. The repu

lsion arising from the excess charge prevents the cells from clumping together. One cell carries −2.50 pC and the other −3.30 pC, and each cell can be modeled as a sphere 3.75×10−6 m in radius. If the red blood cells start very far apart and move directly toward each other with the same speed, what initial speed would each need so that they get close enough to just barely touch? Assume that there is no viscous drag from any of the surrounding liquid.
Physics
1 answer:
belka [17]2 years ago
5 0

Answer:

v = 330.7 m/s

Explanation:

Let say initially the speed of two blood cells is v and they are far apart from each other

when they come to the closest distance to each other then in that case the initial total kinetic energy of two blood cells will convert into electrostatic potential energy of the cells

So we can say

\frac{1}{2}mv^2 + \frac{1}{2}mv^2 = \frac{kq_1q_2}{2r}

here we know that

m = 9.05 \times 10^{-14} kg

q_1 = -2.50 pC

q_2 = -3.30 pC

r = 3.75 \times 10^{-6} m

now we will have

(9.05 \times 10^{-14})v^2 = \frac{(9 \times 10^9)(2.50 \times 10^{-12})(3.30 \times 10^{-12})}{2(3.75 \times 10^{-6})}

v^2 = 1.09 \times 10^5

v = 330.7 m/s

You might be interested in
A high school physics instructor catches one of his students chewing gum in class. He decides to discipline the student by askin
KengaRu [80]

a) 219.8 rad/s

b) 20.0 rad/s^2

c) 2.9 m/s^2

d) 7005 m/s^2

e) Towards the axis of rotation

f) 0 m/s^2

g) 31.9 m/s

Explanation:

a)

The angular velocity of an object in rotation is the rate of change of its angular position, so

\omega=\frac{\theta}{t}

where

\theta is the angular displacement

t is the time elapsed

In this problem, we are told that the maximum angular velocity is

\omega_{max}=35 rev/s

The angle covered during 1 revolution is

\theta=2\pi rad

Therefore, the maximum angular velocity is:

\omega_{max}=35 \cdot 2\pi = 219.8 rad/s

b)

The angular acceleration of an object in rotation is the rate of change of the angular velocity:

\alpha = \frac{\Delta \omega}{t}

where

\Delta \omega is the change in angular velocity

t is the time elapsed

Here we have:

\omega_0 = 0 is the initial angular velocity

\omega_{max}=219.8 rad/s is the final angular velocity

t = 11 s is the time elapsed

Therefore, the angular acceleration is:

\alpha = \frac{219.8-0}{11}=20.0 rad/s^2

c)

For an object in rotation, the acceleration has two components:

- A radial acceleration, called centripetal acceleration, towards the centre of the circle

- A tangential acceleration, tangential to the circle

The tangential acceleration is given by

a_t = \alpha r

where

\alpha is the angular acceleration

r is the radius of the circle

Here we have

\alpha =20.0 rad/s^2

d = 29 cm is the diameter, so the radius is

r = d/2 = 14.5 cm = 0.145 m

So the tangential acceleration is

a_t=(20.0)(0.145)=2.9 m/s^2

d)

The magnitude of the radial (centripetal) acceleration is given by

a_c = \omega^2 r

where

\omega is the angular velocity

r is the radius of the circle

Here we have:

\omega_{max}=219.8 rad/s is the angular velocity when the fan is at full speed

r = 0.145 m is the distance of the gum from the centre of the circle

Therefore, the radial acceleration is

a_c=(219.8)^2(0.145)=7005 m/s^2

e)

The direction of the centripetal acceleration in a rotational motion is always towards the centre of the axis of rotation.

Therefore also in this case, the direction of the centripetal acceleration is towards the axis of rotation of the fan.

f)

The magnitude of the tangential acceleration of the fan at any moment is given by

The tangential acceleration is given by

a_t = \alpha r

where

\alpha is the angular acceleration

r is the radius of the circle

When the fan is rotating at full speed, we have:

\alpha=0, since the fan is no longer accelerating, because the angular velocity is no longer changing

r = 0.145 m

Therefore, the tangential acceleration when the fan is at full speed is

a_t=(0)(0.145)=0 m/s^2

g)

The linear speed of an object in rotational motion is related to the angular velocity by the formula:

v=\omega r

where

v is the linear speed

\omega is the angular velocity

r is the radius

When the fan is rotating at maximum angular velocity, we have:

\omega=219.8 rad/s

r = 0.145 m

Therefore, the linear speed of the gum as it is un-stucked from the fan will be:

v=(219.8)(0.145)=31.9 m/s

7 0
2 years ago
A valuable statuette from a Greek shipwreck lies at the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea. The statuette has a mass of 10,566 g an
leonid [27]

Answer:

A) W = 103.55 N

B) mass of displaced water = 4186 g

C) W_displaced water = 41.06 N

D) Buoyant force = 41.06 N.

E) ZERO

F) 62.54 N

Explanation:

We are given;

mass of statuette;m = 10,566 g = 10.566 kg

volume = 4,064 cm³

Density of seawater;ρ = 1.03 g/mL = 1.03 g/cm³

A) The dry weight of the statuette can be calculated as;

W = mg

So;

W = 10.556 × 9.81

W = 103.55 N

B) Mass of displaced water is calculated from;

Density = mass/volume

So, mass = Density × Volume

m = 1.03 × 4,064 = 4186 g

C) Weight of displaced water is given by;

W_displaced water = (m_displaced water) × g

W_displaced water = 4.186 kg × 9.81 m/s^2 = 41.06 N

D) The buoyant force is the same as the weight of the displaced water.

Thus, Buoyant force = 41.06 N.

E) The apparent weight of the statuette is calculated from;

Apparent weight = Dry weight - Weight of displaced water

Apparent weight = 103.6 N - 41.06 N = 62.54 N. It is sitting on the bottom of the sea, so the sea floor is providing an opposite force that is equal but opposite the weight so that the net force on the statuette is zero. Since It has zero acceleration, in any direction, hence the net force on it is zero.

F. From E above, The Force required to lift the statuette = 62.54 N

4 0
2 years ago
You have a light spring which obeys Hooke's law. This spring stretches 2.92 cm vertically when a 2.70 kg object is suspended fro
ehidna [41]

(a) 907.5 N/m

The force applied to the spring is equal to the weight of the object suspended on it, so:

F=mg=(2.70 kg)(9.8 m/s^2)=26.5 N

The spring obeys Hook's law:

F=k\Delta x

where k is the spring constant and \Delta x is the stretching of the spring. Since we know \Delta x=2.92 cm=0.0292 m, we can re-arrange the equation to find the spring constant:

k=\frac{F}{\Delta x}=\frac{26.5 N}{0.0292 m}=907.5 N/m

(b) 1.45 cm

In this second case, the force applied to the spring will be different, since the weight of the new object is different:

F=mg=(1.35 kg)(9.8 m/s^2)=13.2 N

So, by applying Hook's law again, we can find the new stretching of the spring (using the value of the spring constant that we found in the previous part):

\Delta x=\frac{F}{k}=\frac{13.2 N}{907.5 N/m}=0.0145 m=1.45 cm

(c) 3.5 J

The amount of work that must be done to stretch the string by a distance \Delta x is equal to the elastic potential energy stored by the spring, given by:

W=U=\frac{1}{2}k\Delta x^2

Substituting k=907.5 N/m and \Delta x=8.80 cm=0.088 m, we find the amount of work that must be done:

W=\frac{1}{2}(907.5 N/m)(0.088 m)^2=3.5 J

5 0
2 years ago
A radioactive source has a half life of 80s.
Burka [1]
Lets make the original number of nuclides at the start is 100.

If 7/8 of 100 is decayed, that means 87.5 decayed.

\frac{7}{8} \times 100 = 87.5

And there is 1/8 left of the number of nuclide 100. Which is 12.5

100 - 87.5 =12.5

\frac{1}{8} \times 100 = 12.5

How many Half lifes passed for 100 to become 12.5 is 3 Half-Lives.

100 \div 2 \div 2 \div 2 = 12.5

Each Half-Life is 80 seconds so there is 240 seconds

3 \times 80 = 240The answer is that it takes 240 seconds.
6 0
2 years ago
a pencil is pushed horizontally off a desk with a speed of 1.2m/s if it takes 0.4 seconds for the pencil to reach the ground how
kari74 [83]
The pencil has a horizontal velocity of 1.2 m/s.  To see how far it travels in the horizontal direction over the 0.4 seconds it is falling, use the relation x=vt, where x is the distance, v is the x-directed velocity, and t is time.
x=1.2m/s*0.4s = 0.48m 
3 0
2 years ago
Other questions:
  • Fish, poultry, lean meats, and nuts should be consumed for which of the following nutrients? A. calcium B. carbohydrates C. prot
    6·2 answers
  • Where is the steering nozzle located on a pwc?
    14·2 answers
  • How did the team determine that the body was placed in a wood chipper?
    10·2 answers
  • A person driving a car suddenly applies the brakes. The car takes 4 s to come to rest while traveling 20 m at constant accelerat
    13·1 answer
  • The current supplied by a battery slowly decreases as the battery runs down. Suppose that the current as a function of time is:
    6·1 answer
  • In a common but dangerous prank, a chair is pulled away as a person is moving downward to sit on it, causing the victim to land
    9·1 answer
  • A Porsche 944 Turbo has a rated engine power of 217 hp. 30% of the power is lost in the drive train, and 70% reaches the wheels.
    12·1 answer
  • A book rests on the shelf of a bookcase. The reaction force to the force of gravity acting on the book is 1. The force of the sh
    8·2 answers
  • The microwaves in a microwave oven are produced in a special tube called a magnetron. The electrons orbit in a magnetic field of
    15·1 answer
  • City A lies directly west of city B. When there is no wind, an airliner makes the round trip flight of distance s between them i
    6·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!