DATA You have a bucket containing; in unknown liquid. You also have a cube-shaped wooden block that you measure to be 8.0 cm on a side, but you don’t know the mass or density of the block. To find the density of the liquid, you perform an experiment. First you place the wooden block in the liquid and measure the height of the top of the floating block above the liquid surface. Then you stack various numbers of U.S. quarter-dollar coins onto the block and measure the new value of h . The straight line that gives the best fit to the data you have collected is shown in Fig. P12.86 . Find the mass of one quarter (sec www.usmint.gov for quarters dated 2012). Use this information and the slope and intercept of the straight-line fit to your data to calculate (a) the density of the liquid (in kg/m 3 ) and (b) the mass of the block (in kg).
DATA You have a bucket containing; in unknown liquid. You also have a cube-shaped wooden block that you measure to be 8.0 cm on a side, but you don’t know the mass or density of the block. To find the density of the liquid, you perform an experiment. First you place the wooden block in the liquid and measure the height of the top of the floating block above the liquid surface. Then you stack various numbers of U.S. quarter-dollar coins onto the block and measure the new value of h . The straight line that gives the best fit to the data you have collected is shown in Fig. P12.86 . Find the mass of one quarter (sec www.usmint.gov for quarters dated 2012). Use this information and the slope and intercept of the straight-line fit to your data to calculate (a) the density of the liquid (in kg/m 3 ) and (b) the mass of the block (in kg).
DATA You have a bucket containing; in unknown liquid. You also have a cube-shaped wooden block that you measure to be 8.0 cm on a side, but you don’t know the mass or density of the block. To find the density of the liquid, you perform an experiment. First you place the wooden block in the liquid and measure the height of the top of the floating block above the liquid surface. Then you stack various numbers of U.S. quarter-dollar coins onto the block and measure the new value of h. The straight line that gives the best fit to the data you have collected is shown in Fig. P12.86. Find the mass of one quarter (sec www.usmint.gov for quarters dated 2012). Use this information and the slope and intercept of the straight-line fit to your data to calculate (a) the density of the liquid (in kg/m3) and (b) the mass of the block (in kg).
Consider a rubber rod that has been rubbed with fur to give the rod a net negative charge, and a glass rod that has been rubbed with silk to give it a net positive charge. After being charged by contact by the fur and silk...?
a. Both rods have less mass
b. the rubber rod has more mass and the glass rod has less mass
c. both rods have more mass
d. the masses of both rods are unchanged
e. the rubber rod has less mass and the glass rod has mroe mass
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