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Fundamentals of Physics Extended
10th Edition
ISBN: 9781118230725
Author: David Halliday, Robert Resnick, Jearl Walker
Publisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated
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Textbook Question
Chapter 23, Problem 62P
A particle of charge q = 1.0 × 10−7 C is at the center of a spherical cavity of radius 3.0 cm in a chunk of metal. Find the electric field (a) 1.5 cm from the cavity center and (b) anyplace in the metal.
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Race car driver is cruising down the street at a constant speed of 28.9 m/s (~65 mph; he has a “lead” foot) when the traffic light in front of him turns red. a) If the driver’s reaction time is 160 ms, how far does he and his car travel down the road from the instant he sees the light change to the instant he begins to slow down? b) If the driver’s combined reaction and movement time is 750 ms, how far do he and his car travel down the road from the instant he sees the light change to the instant he slams on her brakes and car begins to slow down? Please answer parts a-B. Show all work. For each question draw a diagram to show the vector/s. Show all the step and provide units in the answers. Provide answer to 2 decimal places. DONT FORGET TO DRAW VECTORS! ONLY USE BASIC FORMULAS TAUGHT IN PHYSICS. distance = speed * time.
Race car driver is cruising down the street at a constant speed of 28.9 m/s (~65 mph; he has a “lead” foot) when the traffic light in front of him turns red. a) If the driver’s reaction time is 160 ms, how far does he and his car travel down the road from the instant he sees the light change to the instant he begins to slow down? b) If the driver’s combined reaction and movement time is 750 ms, how far do he and his car travel down the road from the instant he sees the light change to the instant he slams on her brakes and car begins to slow down? c) If the driver’s average rate of acceleration is -9.5 m/s2 as he slows down, how long does it take him to come to a stop (use information about his speed of 28.9 m/s but do NOT use his reaction and movement time in this computation)? Please answer parts a-c. Show all work. For each question draw a diagram to show the vector/s. Show all the step and provide units in the answers. Provide answer to 2 decimal places unless stated otherwise.…
How is it that part a is connected to part b? I can't seem to solve either part and don't see the connection between the two.
Chapter 23 Solutions
Fundamentals of Physics Extended
Ch. 23 - A surface has the area vector A = 2 i 3 j m2....Ch. 23 - Figure 23-22 shows, in cross section, three solid...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-23 shows, in cross section, a central...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-24 shows, in cross section, two Gaussian...Ch. 23 - In Fig. 23-25, an election is released between two...Ch. 23 - Three infinite nonconducting sheets, with uniform...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-26 shows four situations in which four...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-27 shows four solid spheres, each with...Ch. 23 - A small charged ball lies within the hollow of a...Ch. 23 - Rank the situations of Question 9 according to the...
Ch. 23 - Figure 23-28 shows a section of three long charged...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-29 shows four Gaussian surfaces...Ch. 23 - SSM The square surface shown in Fig. 23-30...Ch. 23 - An electric field given by E = 4.0 i 3.0y2 2.0 j...Ch. 23 - The cube in Fig. 23-31 has edge length 1.40 m and...Ch. 23 - In Fig. 23-32, a butterfly net is in a uniform...Ch. 23 - In Fig. 23-33, a proton is a distance d/2 directly...Ch. 23 - At each point on the surface of the cube shown in...Ch. 23 - A particle of charge 1.8 C is at the center of a...Ch. 23 - When a shower is turned on in a dosed bathroom,...Ch. 23 - ILW Fig. 23-31 shows a Gaussian surface in the...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-34 shows a closed Gaussian surface in...Ch. 23 - GO Figure 23-35 shows a dosed Gaussian surface in...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-36 shows two non-conducting spherical...Ch. 23 - SSM The electric field in a certain region of...Ch. 23 - GO Flux and nonconducting shells. A charged...Ch. 23 - A particle of charge q is placed at one corner of...Ch. 23 - GO The box-like Gaussian surface shown in Fig....Ch. 23 - SSM A uniformly charged conducting sphere of 1.2 m...Ch. 23 - The electric field just above the surface of the...Ch. 23 - Space vehicles traveling through Earths radiation...Ch. 23 - GO Flux and conducting shells. A charged particle...Ch. 23 - An isolated conductor has net charge 10 106 C and...Ch. 23 - An electron is released 9.0 cm from a very long...Ch. 23 - a The drum of a photocopying machine has a length...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-40 shows a section of a long,...Ch. 23 - SSM An infinite line of charge produces a field of...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-41a shows a narrow charged solid...Ch. 23 - GO A long, straight wire has fixed negative charge...Ch. 23 - GO A charge of uniform linear density 2.0 nC/m is...Ch. 23 - SSM WWW Figure 23-42 is a section of a conducting...Ch. 23 - In Fig. 23-43, short sections of two very long...Ch. 23 - ILW Two long, charged, thin-walled, concentric...Ch. 23 - GO A long, nonconducting, solid cylinder of radius...Ch. 23 - In Fig. 23-44, two large, thin metal plates are...Ch. 23 - In Fig. 23-45, a small circular hole of radius R =...Ch. 23 - GO Figure 23-46a shows three plastic sheets that...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-47 shows cross sections through two...Ch. 23 - SSM WWW A square metal plate of edge length 8.0 cm...Ch. 23 - GO In Fig. 23-48a, an electron is shot directly...Ch. 23 - SSM In Fig. 23-49, a small, nonconducting ball of...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-50 shows a very large nonconducting...Ch. 23 - GO An electron is shot directly toward the center...Ch. 23 - Two large metal plates of area 1.0 m2 face each...Ch. 23 - GO Figure 23-51 shows a cross section through a...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-52 gives the magnitude of the electric...Ch. 23 - Two charged concentric spherical shells have radii...Ch. 23 - Assume that a ball of charged particles has a...Ch. 23 - SSM An unknown charge sits on a conducting solid...Ch. 23 - GO A charged particle is held at the center of a...Ch. 23 - In Fig, 23-54, a solid sphere of radius a = 2.00...Ch. 23 - GO Figure 23-55 shows two nonconducting spherical...Ch. 23 - SSM WWW In Fig. 23-56, a nonconducting spherical...Ch. 23 - GO Figure 23-57 shows a spherical shell with...Ch. 23 - ILW The volume charge density of a solid...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-58 shows, in cross section, two solid...Ch. 23 - A charge distribution that is spherically...Ch. 23 - The electric field in a particular space is E = x ...Ch. 23 - A thin-walled metal spherical shell has radius...Ch. 23 - A uniform surface charge of density 8.0 nC/m2 is...Ch. 23 - Charge of uniform volume density = 1.2 nC/m3...Ch. 23 - The chocolate crumb mystery. Explosions ignited by...Ch. 23 - SSM A thin-walled metal spherical shell of radius...Ch. 23 - A particle of charge q = 1.0 107 C is at the...Ch. 23 - A proton at speed v = 3.00 105 m/s orbits at...Ch. 23 - Equation 23-11 E = /0 gives the electric field at...Ch. 23 - Charge Q is uniformly distributed in a sphere of...Ch. 23 - A charged particle causes an electric flux of 750...Ch. 23 - SSM The electric field at point P just outside the...Ch. 23 - The net electric flux through each face of a die...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-59 shows, in cross section, three...Ch. 23 - Charge of uniform volume density = 3.2 C/m3 fills...Ch. 23 - A Gaussian surface in the form of a hemisphere of...Ch. 23 - What net charge is enclosed by the Gaussian cube...Ch. 23 - A nonconducting solid sphere has a uniform volume...Ch. 23 - A uniform charge density of 500 nC/m3 is...Ch. 23 - Figure 23-61 shows a Geiger counter, a device used...Ch. 23 - Charge is distributed uniformly throughout the...Ch. 23 - SSM A spherical conducting shell has a charge of...Ch. 23 - A charge of 6.00 pC is spread uniformly throughout...Ch. 23 - Water in an irrigation ditch of width w = 3.22 m...Ch. 23 - Charge of uniform surface density 8.00 nC/m2 is...Ch. 23 - A spherical ball at charged particles has a...
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