In Fig. 3-31, a cube of edge length a sits with one corner at the origin of an xyz coordinate system. A body diagonal is a line that extends from one corner to another through the center. In unit-vector notation, what is the body diagonal that extends from the corner at (a) coordinates (0, 0, 0), (b) coordinates ( a , 0, 0), (c) coordinates (0, a , 0), and (d) coordinates ( a , a , 0)? (e) Determine the angles that the body diagonals make with the adjacent edges, (f) Determine the length of the body diagonals in terms of a . Figure 3-31 Problem 32.
In Fig. 3-31, a cube of edge length a sits with one corner at the origin of an xyz coordinate system. A body diagonal is a line that extends from one corner to another through the center. In unit-vector notation, what is the body diagonal that extends from the corner at (a) coordinates (0, 0, 0), (b) coordinates ( a , 0, 0), (c) coordinates (0, a , 0), and (d) coordinates ( a , a , 0)? (e) Determine the angles that the body diagonals make with the adjacent edges, (f) Determine the length of the body diagonals in terms of a . Figure 3-31 Problem 32.
In Fig. 3-31, a cube of edge length a sits with one corner at the origin of an xyz coordinate system. A body diagonal is a line that extends from one corner to another through the center. In unit-vector notation, what is the body diagonal that extends from the corner at (a) coordinates (0, 0, 0), (b) coordinates (a, 0, 0), (c) coordinates (0, a, 0), and (d) coordinates (a, a, 0)? (e) Determine the angles that the body diagonals make with the adjacent edges, (f) Determine the length of the body diagonals in terms of a.
At point A, 3.20 m from a small source of sound that is emitting uniformly in all directions, the intensity level is 58.0 dB. What is the intensity of the sound at A? How far from the source must you go so that the intensity is one-fourth of what it was at A? How far must you go so that the sound level is one-fourth of what it was at A?
Make a plot of the acceleration of a ball that is thrown upward at 20 m/s subject to gravitation alone (no drag). Assume upward is the +y direction (and downward negative y).
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