BIO Weighing a Virus. In February 2004, scientists at Purdue University used a highly sensitive technique to measure the mass of a vaccinia virus (the kind used in smallpox vaccine). The procedure involved measuring the frequency of oscillation of a tiny sliver of silicon (just 30 nm long) with a laser, first without the virus and then after the virus had attached itself to the silicon. The difference in mass caused a change in the frequency. We can model such a process as a mass on a spring. (a) Show that the ratio of the frequency with the virus attached ( f S+V ) to the frequency without the virus ( f S ) is given by f S+V / f S = 1 / 1 + ( m V / m S ) , where m V is the mass of the virus and m S is the mass of the silicon sliver. Notice that it is not necessary to know or measure the force constant of the spring. (b) In some data, the silicon sliver has a mass of 2.10 × 10 −16 g and a frequency of 2.00 × 10 15 Hz without the virus and 2.87 × 10 14 Hz with the virus. What is the mass of the virus, in grams and in femtograms?
BIO Weighing a Virus. In February 2004, scientists at Purdue University used a highly sensitive technique to measure the mass of a vaccinia virus (the kind used in smallpox vaccine). The procedure involved measuring the frequency of oscillation of a tiny sliver of silicon (just 30 nm long) with a laser, first without the virus and then after the virus had attached itself to the silicon. The difference in mass caused a change in the frequency. We can model such a process as a mass on a spring. (a) Show that the ratio of the frequency with the virus attached ( f S+V ) to the frequency without the virus ( f S ) is given by f S+V / f S = 1 / 1 + ( m V / m S ) , where m V is the mass of the virus and m S is the mass of the silicon sliver. Notice that it is not necessary to know or measure the force constant of the spring. (b) In some data, the silicon sliver has a mass of 2.10 × 10 −16 g and a frequency of 2.00 × 10 15 Hz without the virus and 2.87 × 10 14 Hz with the virus. What is the mass of the virus, in grams and in femtograms?
BIO Weighing a Virus. In February 2004, scientists at Purdue University used a highly sensitive technique to measure the mass of a vaccinia virus (the kind used in smallpox vaccine). The procedure involved measuring the frequency of oscillation of a tiny sliver of silicon (just 30 nm long) with a laser, first without the virus and then after the virus had attached itself to the silicon.
The difference in mass caused a change in the frequency. We can model such a process as a mass on a spring. (a) Show that the ratio of the frequency with the virus attached (fS+V) to the frequency without the virus (fS) is given by
f
S+V
/
f
S
=
1
/
1
+
(
m
V
/
m
S
)
, where mV is the mass of the virus and mS is the mass of the silicon sliver. Notice that it is not necessary to know or measure the force constant of the spring. (b) In some data, the silicon sliver has a mass of 2.10 × 10−16g and a frequency of 2.00 × 1015 Hz without the virus and 2.87 × 1014 Hz with the virus. What is the mass of the virus, in grams and in femtograms?
A fluid with density 263 kg/m3 flows through a pipe of varying diameter and height. At location 1 the flow speed is 13.5 m/s and the diameter of the pipe is 7.4 cm down to location 2 the pipe diameter is 16.9 cm. Location 1 is 6.3 meters higher than location 2.
What is the difference in pressure P2 - P1?
Using units in Pascals and use g = 9.81 m/s2.
The kitchen had a temperature 46 degrees Fahrenheit and was converted it to Kelvin. What is the correct number for this temperature (46 F) on the Kelvin scale?
Water is traveling at a speed of 0.65 m/s through a pipe with a cross-section radius of 0.23 meters. The water enters a section of pipe that has a smaller radius, only 0.11 meters. What is the speed of the water traveling in this narrower section of pipe?
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