GO In Fig. 13-37 a , particle A is fixed in place at x = −0.20 m on the x axis and particle B. with a mass of 1.0 kg, is fixed in place at the origin. Particle C (not shown) can be moved along the x axis, between particle B and x = ∞. Figure 13-37 b shows the x component F net, x of the net gravitational force on particle B due to particles A and C, as a function of position x of particle C. The plot actually extends to the right, approaching an asymptote of −4.17 × 10 −10 N as x → ∞. What are the masses of (a) particle A and (b) particle C? Figure 13-37 Problem 12.
GO In Fig. 13-37 a , particle A is fixed in place at x = −0.20 m on the x axis and particle B. with a mass of 1.0 kg, is fixed in place at the origin. Particle C (not shown) can be moved along the x axis, between particle B and x = ∞. Figure 13-37 b shows the x component F net, x of the net gravitational force on particle B due to particles A and C, as a function of position x of particle C. The plot actually extends to the right, approaching an asymptote of −4.17 × 10 −10 N as x → ∞. What are the masses of (a) particle A and (b) particle C? Figure 13-37 Problem 12.
GO In Fig. 13-37a, particle A is fixed in place at x = −0.20 m on the x axis and particle B. with a mass of 1.0 kg, is fixed in place at the origin. Particle C (not shown) can be moved along the x axis, between particle B and x = ∞. Figure 13-37b shows the x component Fnet, x of the net gravitational force on particle B due to particles A and C, as a function of position x of particle C. The plot actually extends to the right, approaching an asymptote of −4.17 × 10−10 N as x → ∞. What are the masses of (a) particle A and (b) particle C?
At point A, 3.20 m from a small source of sound that is emitting uniformly in all directions, the intensity level is 58.0 dB. What is the intensity of the sound at A? How far from the source must you go so that the intensity is one-fourth of what it was at A? How far must you go so that the sound level is one-fourth of what it was at A?
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