
EBK COLLEGE PHYSICS, VOLUME 2
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781337514644
Author: Vuille
Publisher: CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENT
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Question
Chapter 24, Problem 28P
To determine
The minimum thickness of magnesium fluoride.
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A proton moves at 5.20 × 105 m/s in the horizontal direction. It enters a uniform vertical electric field with a magnitude of 8.40 × 103 N/C. Ignore any gravitational effects.
(a) Find the time interval required for the proton to travel 6.00 cm horizontally.
83.33
☑
Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 10%. Double check your calculations. ns
(b) Find its vertical displacement during the time interval in which it travels 6.00 cm horizontally. (Indicate direction with the sign of your answer.)
2.77
Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 10%. Double check your calculations. mm
(c) Find the horizontal and vertical components of its velocity after it has traveled 6.00 cm horizontally.
5.4e5
V
×
Your response differs significantly from the correct answer. Rework your solution from the beginning and check each step carefully. I + [6.68e4
Your response differs significantly from the correct answer. Rework your solution from the beginning and check each…
(1)
Fm
Fmn
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Fm
B
W₁
e
Fmt
W
0
Fit
Wt
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Fit
Fin
n
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n
As illustrated in Fig.
consider the
person
performing extension/flexion movements of the lower leg
about the knee joint (point O) to investigate the forces and
torques produced by muscles crossing the knee joint. The
setup of the experiment is described in Example
above.
The geometric parameters of the model under investigation,
some of the forces acting on the lower leg and its free-body
diagrams are shown in Figs. and For this system, the
angular displacement, angular velocity, and angular accelera-
tion of the lower leg were computed using data obtained
during the experiment such that at an instant when 0 = 65°,
@ = 4.5 rad/s, and a = 180 rad/s². Furthermore, for this sys-
tem assume that a = 4.0 cm, b = 23 cm, ß = 25°, and the net
torque generated about the knee joint is M₁ = 55 Nm. If the
torque generated about the knee joint by the weight of the lower
leg is Mw 11.5 Nm, determine:
=
The moment arm a of Fm relative to the…
The figure shows a particle that carries a charge of 90 = -2.50 × 106 C. It is moving along the +y
->
axis at a speed of v = 4.79 × 106 m/s. A magnetic field B of magnitude 3.24 × 10-5 T is directed
along the +z axis, and an electric field E of magnitude 127 N/C points along the -x axis.
Determine (a) the magnitude and (b) direction (as an angle within x-y plane with respect to +x-
axis in the range (-180°, 180°]) of the net force that acts on the particle.
+x
+z
AB
90
+y
Chapter 24 Solutions
EBK COLLEGE PHYSICS, VOLUME 2
Ch. 24.2 - In a two-slit interference pattern projected on a...Ch. 24.2 - if the distance between the slits is doubled in...Ch. 24.2 - A Youngs double-slit experiment is performed with...Ch. 24.4 - Suppose Youngs experiment is carried out in air,...Ch. 24.7 - In a single-alit diffraction experiment, as the...Ch. 24.8 - If laser light is reflected from a phonograph...Ch. 24 - Your automobile has two headlights. What sort of...Ch. 24 - A plane monochromatic light wave is incident on a...Ch. 24 - A plane monochromatic light wave is incident on a...Ch. 24 - If a Youngs experiment carried out in air is...
Ch. 24 - Sodiums emission lines at 589.0 nm and 589.6 nm...Ch. 24 - Count the number of 180 phase reversals for the...Ch. 24 - Figure CQ24.7 shows rays with wavelength incident...Ch. 24 - Fingerprints left on a piece of glass such as a...Ch. 24 - In everyday experience, why are radio waves...Ch. 24 - Suppose reflected while light is used to observe a...Ch. 24 - Would it be possible to place a nonreflective...Ch. 24 - Certain sunglasses use a polarizing material to...Ch. 24 - Why is it so much easier to perform interference...Ch. 24 - A soap film is held vertically in air and is...Ch. 24 - Consider a dark fringe in an interference pattern...Ch. 24 - Holding your hand at arms length, you can readily...Ch. 24 - A laser beam is incident on two slits with a...Ch. 24 - In a Youngs double-slit experiment, a set of...Ch. 24 - Light at 633 nm from a helium-neon laser shines on...Ch. 24 - Light of wavelength 620. nm falls on a double...Ch. 24 - In a location where the speed of sound is 354 m/s....Ch. 24 - A double slit separated by 0.058 0 mm is placed...Ch. 24 - Two radio antennas separated by d = 3.00 102 cm....Ch. 24 - Prob. 8PCh. 24 - Monochromatic light falls on a screen 1.75 m from...Ch. 24 - A pair of parallel slits separated by 2.00 104 m...Ch. 24 - A riverside warehouse has two open doors, as in...Ch. 24 - A student sets up a double-slit experiment using...Ch. 24 - Radio waves from a star, of wavelength 2.50 102...Ch. 24 - Monochromatic light of wavelength is incident on...Ch. 24 - Waves from a radio station have a wavelength of...Ch. 24 - A soap bubble (n = 1.33) having a wall thickness...Ch. 24 - A thin layer of liquid methylene iodide (n =...Ch. 24 - A thin film of oil (n = 1.25) is located on...Ch. 24 - A thin film of glass (n = 1.52) of thickness 0.420...Ch. 24 - A transparent oil with index of refraction 1.29...Ch. 24 - A possible means for making an airplane invisible...Ch. 24 - An oil film (n = 1.45) floating on water is...Ch. 24 - Astronomers observe the chromosphere of the Sun...Ch. 24 - A spacer is cut from a playing card of thickness...Ch. 24 - An investigator finds at a fiber at a crime scene...Ch. 24 - A plano-convex lens with radius of curvature R =...Ch. 24 - A thin film of oil (n = 1.45) of thickness 425 nm...Ch. 24 - Prob. 28PCh. 24 - A thin film of glycerin (n = 1.173) of thickness...Ch. 24 - Prob. 30PCh. 24 - Light of wavelength 5.40 102 nm passes through a...Ch. 24 - A student and his lab partner create a single slit...Ch. 24 - Light of wavelength 587.5 nm illuminates a slit of...Ch. 24 - Microwaves of wavelength 5.00 cm enter a long,...Ch. 24 - A beam of monochromatic light is diffracted by a...Ch. 24 - A screen is placed 50.0 cm from a single slit that...Ch. 24 - A slit of width 0.50 mm is illuminated with light...Ch. 24 - The second-order dark fringe in a single-slit...Ch. 24 - Three discrete spectral lines occur at angles of...Ch. 24 - Intense white light is incident on a diffraction...Ch. 24 - The hydrogen spectrum has a red line at 656 nm and...Ch. 24 - Prob. 42PCh. 24 - A helium-neon laser ( = 632.8 nm) is used to...Ch. 24 - Prob. 44PCh. 24 - Prob. 45PCh. 24 - White light is incident on a diffraction grating...Ch. 24 - Sunlight is incident on a diffraction grating that...Ch. 24 - Monochromatic light at 577 nm illuminates a...Ch. 24 - Light of wavelength 5.00 102 nm is incident...Ch. 24 - Prob. 50PCh. 24 - The angle of incidence of a light beam in air onto...Ch. 24 - Unpolarized light passes through two Polaroid...Ch. 24 - The index of retraction of a glass plate is 1.52....Ch. 24 - At what angle above the horizon is the Sun if...Ch. 24 - Prob. 55PCh. 24 - The critical angle for total internal reflection...Ch. 24 - Equation 24.14 assumes the incident light is in...Ch. 24 - Prob. 58PCh. 24 - Three polarizing plates whose planes are parallel...Ch. 24 - Light of intensity I0 is polarized vertically and...Ch. 24 - Light with a wavelength in vacuum of 546.1 nm...Ch. 24 - Light from a helium-neon laser ( = 632.8 nm) is...Ch. 24 - Laser light with a wavelength of 632.6 nm is...Ch. 24 - In a Youngs interference experiment, the two slits...Ch. 24 - Light of wavelength 546 nm (the intense green line...Ch. 24 - The two speakers are placed 35.0 cm apart. A...Ch. 24 - Interference effects are produced at point P on a...Ch. 24 - Prob. 68APCh. 24 - Figure P24.69 shows a radio-wave transmitter and a...Ch. 24 - Three polarizers, centered on a common axis and...Ch. 24 - Prob. 71APCh. 24 - A plano-convex lens (flat on one side, convex on...Ch. 24 - A diffraction pattern is produced on a screen 1.40...Ch. 24 - Prob. 74AP
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- A proton moves at 5.20 x 105 m/s in the horizontal direction. It enters a uniform vertical electric field with a magnitude of 8.40 × 103 N/C. Ignore any gravitational effects. (a) Find the time interval required for the proton to travel 6.00 cm horizontally. 83.33 Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 10%. Double check your calculations. ns (b) Find its vertical displacement during the time interval in which it travels 6.00 cm horizontally. (Indicate direction with the sign of your answer.) 2.77 Your response differs from the correct answer by more than 10%. Double check your calculations. mm (c) Find the horizontal and vertical components of its velocity after it has traveled 6.00 cm horizontally. = 5.4e5 Your response differs significantly from the correct answer. Rework your solution from the beginning and check each step carefully. I + 6.68e4 Your response differs significantly from the correct answer. Rework your solution from the beginning and check each step…arrow_forward(a) A physics lab instructor is working on a new demonstration. She attaches two identical copper spheres with mass m = 0.180 g to cords of length L as shown in the figure. A Both spheres have the same charge of 6.80 nC, and are in static equilibrium when = 4.95°. What is L (in m)? Assume the cords are massless. 0.150 Draw a free-body diagram, apply Newton's second law for a particle in equilibrium to one of the spheres. Find an equation for the distance between the two spheres in terms of L and 0, and use this expression in your Coulomb force equation. m (b) What If? The charge on both spheres is increased until each cord makes an angle of 0 = 9.90° with the vertical. If both spheres have the same electric charge, what is the charge (in nC) on each sphere in this case? 13.6 ☑ Use the same reasoning as in part (a), only now, use the length found in part (a) and the new angle to solve for the charge. nCarrow_forwardA proton moves at 5.20 x 105 m/s in the horizontal direction. It enters a uniform vertical electric field with a magnitude of 8.40 × 10³ N/C. Ignore any gravitational effects. (a) Find the time interval required for the proton to travel 6.00 cm horizontally. 1.15e-7 ☑ Your response differs significantly from the correct answer. Rework your solution from the beginning and check each step carefully. ns (b) Find its vertical displacement during the time interval in which it travels 6.00 cm horizontally. (Indicate direction with the sign of your answer.) 5.33e-3 ☑ Your response is off by a multiple of ten. mm (c) Find the horizontal and vertical components of its velocity after it has traveled 6.00 cm horizontally. | ↑ + jkm/sarrow_forward
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Spectra Interference: Crash Course Physics #40; Author: CrashCourse;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ob7foUzXaY;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY