In 1654 Otto von Guericke, inventor of the air pump, gave a demonstration before the noblemen of the Holy Roman Empire in which two teams of eight horses could not pull apart two evacuated brass hemispheres, (a) Assuming the hemispheres have (strong) thin walls, so that R in Fig. 14-29 may be considered both the inside and outside radius, show that the force F → required to pull apart the hemispheres has magnitude F = πR 2 Δ p , where Δ p is the difference between the pressures outside and inside the sphere. (b) Taking R as 30 cm, the inside pressure as 0.10 atm, and the outside pressure as 1.00 atm, find the force magnitude the teams of horses would have had to exert to pull apart the hemispheres. (c) explain why one team horses could have proved the point just as well if the hemispheres were attached to a sturdy wall. Figure 14-29 Problem 7.
In 1654 Otto von Guericke, inventor of the air pump, gave a demonstration before the noblemen of the Holy Roman Empire in which two teams of eight horses could not pull apart two evacuated brass hemispheres, (a) Assuming the hemispheres have (strong) thin walls, so that R in Fig. 14-29 may be considered both the inside and outside radius, show that the force F → required to pull apart the hemispheres has magnitude F = πR 2 Δ p , where Δ p is the difference between the pressures outside and inside the sphere. (b) Taking R as 30 cm, the inside pressure as 0.10 atm, and the outside pressure as 1.00 atm, find the force magnitude the teams of horses would have had to exert to pull apart the hemispheres. (c) explain why one team horses could have proved the point just as well if the hemispheres were attached to a sturdy wall. Figure 14-29 Problem 7.
In 1654 Otto von Guericke, inventor of the air pump, gave a demonstration before the noblemen of the Holy Roman Empire in which two teams of eight horses could not pull apart two evacuated brass hemispheres, (a) Assuming the hemispheres have (strong) thin walls, so that R in Fig. 14-29 may be considered both the inside and outside radius, show that the force
F
→
required to pull apart the hemispheres has magnitude F = πR2 Δp, where Δp is the difference between the pressures outside and inside the sphere. (b) Taking R as 30 cm, the inside pressure as 0.10 atm, and the outside pressure as 1.00 atm, find the force magnitude the teams of horses would have had to exert to pull apart the hemispheres. (c) explain why one team horses could have proved the point just as well if the hemispheres were attached to a sturdy wall.
1. A charge of -25 μC is distributed uniformly throughout a spherical volume of radius 11.5 cm.
Determine the electric field due to this charge at a distance of (a) 2 cm, (b) 4.6 cm, and (c) 25 cm from
the center of the sphere.
(a) =
=
(b) E =
(c)Ẻ =
=
NC NC NC
1.
A long silver rod of radius 3.5 cm has a charge of -3.9
ис
on its surface. Here ŕ is a unit vector
ст
directed perpendicularly away from the axis of the rod as shown in the figure.
(a) Find the electric field at a point 5 cm from the center of the rod (an outside point).
E =
N
C
(b) Find the electric field at a point 1.8 cm from the center of the rod (an inside point)
E=0
Think & Prepare
N
C
1. Is there a symmetry in the charge distribution? What kind of symmetry?
2. The problem gives the charge per unit length 1. How do you figure out the surface charge density σ
from a?
1. Determine the electric flux through each surface whose cross-section is shown below.
55
S₂
-29
S5
SA
S3
+ 9
Enter your answer in terms of q and ε
Φ
(a) s₁
(b) s₂
=
-29
(C) Φ
զ
Ερ
(d) SA
=
(e) $5
(f) Sa
$6
=
II
✓
-29
S6
+39
Genetic Analysis: An Integrated Approach (3rd Edition)
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