
University Physics Volume 3
17th Edition
ISBN: 9781938168185
Author: William Moebs, Jeff Sanny
Publisher: OpenStax
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Textbook Question
Chapter 11, Problem 51P
Suppose a W−created in a particle detector lives for 5.00×10−25s . What distance does it move in this time if it is traveling at 0.900c? (Note that the time is longer than the given W−lifetime, which can be due to the statistical nature of decay or time dilation.)
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Four capacitors are connected as shown in the figure below. (Let C = 12.0 μF.)
a
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20.0 με
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(a) Find the equivalent capacitance between points a and b.
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(b) Calculate the charge on each capacitor, taking AV ab = 16.0 V.
20.0 uF capacitor 94.7
6.00 uF capacitor 67.6
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3.00 µF capacitor
capacitor C
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The 3 µF and 12.0 uF capacitors are in series and that combination is in parallel with the 6 μF capacitor. What quantity is the same for capacitors in parallel? μC
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You are correct that the charge on this capacitor will be the same as the charge on the 3 μF capacitor. μC
In the pivot assignment, we observed waves moving on a string stretched by hanging
weights. We noticed that certain frequencies produced standing waves. One such
situation is shown below:
0 ст
Direct Measurement
©2015 Peter Bohacek I.
20
0 cm 10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Which Harmonic is this?
Do NOT include units!
What is the wavelength of this wave in cm with only no decimal places?
If the speed of this wave is 2500 cm/s, what is the frequency of this harmonic (in Hz, with
NO decimal places)?
Four capacitors are connected as shown in the figure below. (Let C = 12.0 µF.)
A circuit consists of four capacitors. It begins at point a before the wire splits in two directions. On the upper split, there is a capacitor C followed by a 3.00 µF capacitor. On the lower split, there is a 6.00 µF capacitor. The two splits reconnect and are followed by a 20.0 µF capacitor, which is then followed by point b.
(a) Find the equivalent capacitance between points a and b. µF(b) Calculate the charge on each capacitor, taking ΔVab = 16.0 V.
20.0 µF capacitor
µC
6.00 µF capacitor
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Chapter 11 Solutions
University Physics Volume 3
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