BIO Cracking Your Knuckles When you “crack” a knuckle, you cause the knuckle cavity to widen rapidly. This, in turn, allows the synovial fluid to expand into a larger volume. If this expansion is sufficiently rapid, it causes a gas bubble to form in the fluid in a process known as cavitation . This is the mechanism responsible for the cracking sound. (Cavitation can also cause pits in rapidly rotating ship’s propellers.) If a “crack” produces a sound with an intensity level of 57 dB at your ear, which is 18 cm from the knuckle, how far from your knuckle can the “crack” be heard? Assume the sound propagates uniformly in all directions, with no reflections or absorption.
BIO Cracking Your Knuckles When you “crack” a knuckle, you cause the knuckle cavity to widen rapidly. This, in turn, allows the synovial fluid to expand into a larger volume. If this expansion is sufficiently rapid, it causes a gas bubble to form in the fluid in a process known as cavitation . This is the mechanism responsible for the cracking sound. (Cavitation can also cause pits in rapidly rotating ship’s propellers.) If a “crack” produces a sound with an intensity level of 57 dB at your ear, which is 18 cm from the knuckle, how far from your knuckle can the “crack” be heard? Assume the sound propagates uniformly in all directions, with no reflections or absorption.
BIO Cracking Your Knuckles When you “crack” a knuckle, you cause the knuckle cavity to widen rapidly. This, in turn, allows the synovial fluid to expand into a larger volume. If this expansion is sufficiently rapid, it causes a gas bubble to form in the fluid in a process known as cavitation. This is the mechanism responsible for the cracking sound. (Cavitation can also cause pits in rapidly rotating ship’s propellers.) If a “crack” produces a sound with an intensity level of 57 dB at your ear, which is 18 cm from the knuckle, how far from your knuckle can the “crack” be heard? Assume the sound propagates uniformly in all directions, with no reflections or absorption.
6. A car drives at steady speed around a perfectly
circular track.
(a) The car's acceleration is zero.
(b) The net force on the car is zero.
(c) Both the acceleration and net force on the car
point outward.
(d) Both the acceleration and net force on the car
point inward.
(e) If there is no friction, the acceleration is
outward.
9. A spring has a force constant of 100 N/m and an
unstretched length of 0.07 m. One end is attached to
a post that is free to rotate in the center of a smooth.
table, as shown in the top view in the figure below.
The other end is attached to a 1kg disc moving in
uniform circular motion on the table, which
stretches the spring by 0.03 m. Friction is negligible.
What is the centripetal force on the disc?
Top View
(a)
0.3 N
(b)
3.0 N
(c)
10 N
(d)
300 N
(e)
1000 N
4. A child has a ball on the end of a cord, and whirls
the ball in a vertical circle. Assuming the speed of
the ball is constant (an approximation), when would
the tension in the cord be greatest?
(a) At the top of the circle.
(b) At the bottom of the circle.
(c) A little after the bottom of the circle when the
ball is climbing.
(d) A little before the bottom of the circle when the
ball is descending quickly.
(e) Nowhere; the cord is pulled the same amount at
all points.
Chemistry: An Introduction to General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry (13th Edition)
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Wave Speed on a String - Tension Force, Intensity, Power, Amplitude, Frequency - Inverse Square Law; Author: The Organic Chemistry Tutor;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vEzftaDL7fM;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY