DATA It is your first day at work as a summer intern at an optics company. Your supervisor hands you a diverging lens and asks you to measure its focal length. You know that with a converging lens, you can measure the focal length by placing an object a distance s to the left of the lens, far enough from the lens for the image to be real, and viewing the image on a screen that is to the right of the lens. By adjusting the position of the screen until the image is in sharp focus, you can determine the image distance s ′ and then use Eq. (34.16) to calculate the focal length f of the lens. But this procedure won’t work with a diverging lens—by itself, a diverging lens produces only virtual images, which can’t be projected onto a screen. Therefore, to determine the focal length of a diverging lens, you do the following: First you take a converging lens and measure that, for an object 20.0 cm to the left of the lens, the image is 29.7 cm to the right of the lens. You then place a diverging lens 20.0 cm to the right of the converging lens and measure the final image to be 42.8 cm to the right of the converging lens. Suspecting some inaccuracy in measurement, you repeat the lens-combination measurement with the same object distance for the converging lens but with the diverging lens 25.0 cm to the right of the converging lens. You measure the final image to be 31.6 cm to the right of the converging lens. (a) Use both lens-combination measurements to calculate the focal length of the diverging lens. Take as your best experimental value for the focal length the average of the two values, (b) Which position of the diverging lens, 20.0 cm to the right or 25.0 cm to the right of the converging lens, gives the tallest image?
DATA It is your first day at work as a summer intern at an optics company. Your supervisor hands you a diverging lens and asks you to measure its focal length. You know that with a converging lens, you can measure the focal length by placing an object a distance s to the left of the lens, far enough from the lens for the image to be real, and viewing the image on a screen that is to the right of the lens. By adjusting the position of the screen until the image is in sharp focus, you can determine the image distance s ′ and then use Eq. (34.16) to calculate the focal length f of the lens. But this procedure won’t work with a diverging lens—by itself, a diverging lens produces only virtual images, which can’t be projected onto a screen. Therefore, to determine the focal length of a diverging lens, you do the following: First you take a converging lens and measure that, for an object 20.0 cm to the left of the lens, the image is 29.7 cm to the right of the lens. You then place a diverging lens 20.0 cm to the right of the converging lens and measure the final image to be 42.8 cm to the right of the converging lens. Suspecting some inaccuracy in measurement, you repeat the lens-combination measurement with the same object distance for the converging lens but with the diverging lens 25.0 cm to the right of the converging lens. You measure the final image to be 31.6 cm to the right of the converging lens. (a) Use both lens-combination measurements to calculate the focal length of the diverging lens. Take as your best experimental value for the focal length the average of the two values, (b) Which position of the diverging lens, 20.0 cm to the right or 25.0 cm to the right of the converging lens, gives the tallest image?
DATA It is your first day at work as a summer intern at an optics company. Your supervisor hands you a diverging lens and asks you to measure its focal length. You know that with a converging lens, you can measure the focal length by placing an object a distance s to the left of the lens, far enough from the lens for the image to be real, and viewing the image on a screen that is to the right of the lens. By adjusting the position of the screen until the image is in sharp focus, you can determine the image distance s′ and then use Eq. (34.16) to calculate the focal length f of the lens. But this procedure won’t work with a diverging lens—by itself, a diverging lens produces only virtual images, which can’t be projected onto a screen. Therefore, to determine the focal length of a diverging lens, you do the following: First you take a converging lens and measure that, for an object 20.0 cm to the left of the lens, the image is 29.7 cm to the right of the lens. You then place a diverging lens 20.0 cm to the right of the converging lens and measure the final image to be 42.8 cm to the right of the converging lens. Suspecting some inaccuracy in measurement, you repeat the lens-combination measurement with the same object distance for the converging lens but with the diverging lens 25.0 cm to the right of the converging lens. You measure the final image to be 31.6 cm to the right of the converging lens. (a) Use both lens-combination measurements to calculate the focal length of the diverging lens. Take as your best experimental value for the focal length the average of the two values, (b) Which position of the diverging lens, 20.0 cm to the right or 25.0 cm to the right of the converging lens, gives the tallest image?
3.63 • Leaping the River II. A physics professor did daredevil
stunts in his spare time. His last stunt was an attempt to jump across
a river on a motorcycle (Fig. P3.63). The takeoff ramp was inclined at
53.0°, the river was 40.0 m wide, and the far bank was 15.0 m lower
than the top of the ramp. The river itself was 100 m below the ramp.
Ignore air resistance. (a) What should his speed have been at the top of
the ramp to have just made it to the edge of the far bank? (b) If his speed
was only half the value found in part (a), where did he land?
Figure P3.63
53.0°
100 m
40.0 m→
15.0 m
Please solve and answer the question correctly please. Thank you!!
You throw a small rock straight up from the edge of a highway bridge that crosses a river. The rock passes you on its way down, 5.00 s after it was thrown. What is the speed of the rock just before it reaches the water 25.0 m below the point where the rock left your hand? Ignore air resistance.
Chapter 34 Solutions
University Physics with Modern Physics Plus Mastering Physics with eText -- Access Card Package (14th Edition)
Human Physiology: An Integrated Approach (8th Edition)
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, physics and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.