DATA In your physics lab, an oscillator is attached to one end of a horizontal string. The other end of the string passes over a frictionless pulley. You suspend a mass M from the free end of the string, producing tension Mg in the string. The oscillator produces transverse waves of frequency f on the string. You don’t vary this frequency during the experiment, but you try strings with three different linear mass densities μ . You also keep a fixed distance between the end of the string where the oscillator is attached and the point where the string is in contact with the pulley’s rim. To produce standing waves on the string, you vary M ; then you measure the node-to-node distance d for each standing-wave pattern and obtain the following data: (a) Explain why you obtain only certain values of d . (b) Graph μd 2 (in kg · m) versus M (in kg). Explain why the data plotted this way should fall close to a straight line. (c) Use the slope of the best straight-line fit to the data to determine the frequency f of the waves produced on the siring by the oscillator. Take g = 9.80 m/s 2 . (d) For string A ( μ = 0.0260 g/cm), what value of M (in grams) would be required to produce a standing wave with a node-to-node distance of 24.0 cm? Use the value of f that you calculated in part (c).
DATA In your physics lab, an oscillator is attached to one end of a horizontal string. The other end of the string passes over a frictionless pulley. You suspend a mass M from the free end of the string, producing tension Mg in the string. The oscillator produces transverse waves of frequency f on the string. You don’t vary this frequency during the experiment, but you try strings with three different linear mass densities μ . You also keep a fixed distance between the end of the string where the oscillator is attached and the point where the string is in contact with the pulley’s rim. To produce standing waves on the string, you vary M ; then you measure the node-to-node distance d for each standing-wave pattern and obtain the following data: (a) Explain why you obtain only certain values of d . (b) Graph μd 2 (in kg · m) versus M (in kg). Explain why the data plotted this way should fall close to a straight line. (c) Use the slope of the best straight-line fit to the data to determine the frequency f of the waves produced on the siring by the oscillator. Take g = 9.80 m/s 2 . (d) For string A ( μ = 0.0260 g/cm), what value of M (in grams) would be required to produce a standing wave with a node-to-node distance of 24.0 cm? Use the value of f that you calculated in part (c).
DATA In your physics lab, an oscillator is attached to one end of a horizontal string. The other end of the string passes over a frictionless pulley. You suspend a mass M from the free end of the string, producing tension Mg in the string. The oscillator produces transverse waves of frequency f on the string. You don’t vary this frequency during the experiment, but you try strings with three different linear mass densities μ. You also keep a fixed distance between the end of the string where the oscillator is attached and the point where the string is in contact with the pulley’s rim. To produce standing waves on the string, you vary M; then you measure the node-to-node distance d for each standing-wave pattern and obtain the following data:
(a) Explain why you obtain only certain values of d. (b) Graph μd2 (in kg · m) versus M (in kg). Explain why the data plotted this way should fall close to a straight line. (c) Use the slope of the best straight-line fit to the data to determine the frequency f of the waves produced on the siring by the oscillator. Take g = 9.80 m/s2. (d) For string A (μ = 0.0260 g/cm), what value of M (in grams) would be required to produce a standing wave with a node-to-node distance of 24.0 cm? Use the value of f that you calculated in part (c).
Using the Experimental Acceleration due to Gravity values from each data table, Data Tables 1, 2, and 3; determine the Standard Deviation, σ, mean, μ, variance, σ2 and the 95% Margin of Error (Confidence Level) Data: Ex. Acc. 1: 12.29 m/s^2. Ex. Acc. 2: 10.86 m/s^2, Ex. Acc. 3: 9.05 m/s^2
In the Super Smash Bros. games the character Yoshi’s has a “ground pound” down special move where he launches himself downward to attack an enemy beneath him. A) If Yoshi flings himself downwards at 9.76 miles per hour to hit an enemy 10.5 m below him, how fast is Yoshi traveling when he hits the enemy? 1 mile = 1609 m B) How much time does it take Yoshi to hit the enemy beneath him?
Campbell Essential Biology with Physiology (5th 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