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yubakkk said:how 2 do it??
but correct answer is Chassam said:see...F=qV/D...F=ma
qV/D=ma.....let V/D--->> A constant K....SO ma=Kq...rearranging....a=Kq/m....means a is proportional to q/m ratio....now chill out...apply this nd u ll get B
ShootingStar said:what if the friction force is mentioned...
arlery said:ShootingStar said:what if the friction force is mentioned...
Is the answer C?
arlery said:Oh yeah my bad, I used g as 9.8 first.
Anyway, here goes:
Solve it by forming 2 simultaneous equations:
For the 8kg box, T-6 = 8a
For the 2 kg box, mg-T = 2a
2(10) - T = 21 ---> 20 - T =2a
Solve them simultaneously and you get a = 1.4 m/s
hassam said:post again./...full is nt visible
ShootingStar said:The answer is D..how? :unknown:
histephenson007 said:ShootingStar said:The answer is D..how? :unknown:
We know that.......... I = A^2 , and I = 1/(x^2)
so, from substitution, we can get (A^2) = 1/(x^2) ......... A=1/x
From the given data, we can form 2 equations:
1........... 8=1/r
2............x=1/2r
from the formula 1, we can get that r=1/8
If we put the value of r into the 2nd equation, x = 1/2r = 8/2 = 4
histephenson007 said:Ok, posted it again
how the hell are we supposed to know the units of specific heat capacity???
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