
Fundamentals Of Physics - Volume 1 Only
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781119306856
Author: Halliday
Publisher: WILEY
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Concept explainers
Textbook Question
Chapter 34, Problem 47P
SSM WWW A double-convex lens is to be made of glass with an index of refraction of 1.5. One surface is to have twice the radius of curvature of the other and the focal length is to be 60 mm. What is the (a) smaller and (b) larger radius?
Expert Solution & Answer

Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solution
Students have asked these similar questions
4. A voltmeter with resistance 10 kQ is used to measure the pd across the 1 kQ resistor in the circuit
below.
6V
5ΚΩ
1ΚΩ
V
Calculate the percentage difference between the value with and without the voltmeter.
1.
A 9V battery with internal resistance 5 2 is connected to a 100 2 resistor. Calculate:
a. the Power dissipated in the 100 2 resistor
b. The heat generated per second inside the battery.
C.
The rate of converting chemical to electrical energy by the battery.
2. A 230 V kettle is rated at 1800 W. Calculate the resistance of the heating element.
2. If each of the resistors in the circuit below has resistance R show that the total resistance between
A and B is 5R/11
A
B
Chapter 34 Solutions
Fundamentals Of Physics - Volume 1 Only
Ch. 34 - Figure 34-25 shows a fish and a fish stalker in...Ch. 34 - In Fig. 34-26, stick figure O stands in front of a...Ch. 34 - Figure 34-27 is an overhead view of a mirror maze...Ch. 34 - A penguin waddles along the central axis of a...Ch. 34 - When a T. rex pursues a jeep in the movie Jurassic...Ch. 34 - An object is placed against the center of a...Ch. 34 - The table details six variations of the basic...Ch. 34 - An object is placed against the center of a...Ch. 34 - Figure 34-30 shows four thin lenses, all of the...Ch. 34 - In Fig. 34-26, stick figure O stands in front of a...
Ch. 34 - Figure 34-31 shows a coordinate system in front of...Ch. 34 - You look through a camera towards an image of a...Ch. 34 - ILW A moth at about eye level is 10 cm in front of...Ch. 34 - In Fig. 34-32, an isotropic point source of light...Ch. 34 - Figure 34-33 shows an overhead view of a corridor...Ch. 34 - SSM WWW Figure 34-34 shows a small lightbulb...Ch. 34 - An object is moved along the central axis of a...Ch. 34 - A concave shaving mirror has a radius of curvature...Ch. 34 - An object is placed against the center of a...Ch. 34 - 9 through 16 GO 12 SSM 9, 11, 13 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 9 through 16 GO 12 SSM 9, 11, 13 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 9 through 16 GO 12 SSM 9, 11, 13 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 9 through 16 GO 12 SSM 9, 11, 13 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 9 through 16 GO 12 SSM 9, 11, 13 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 9 through 16 GO 12 SSM 9, 11, 13 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 9 through 16 GO 12 SSM 9, 11, 13 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 9 through 16 GO 12 SSM 9, 11, 13 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22SSM 23, 29 More mirrors. Object...Ch. 34 - 17 through 29 GO 22 SSM 23, 29 More mirrors....Ch. 34 - GO Figure 34-37 gives the lateral magnification m...Ch. 34 - a A luminous point is moving at speed vo towards a...Ch. 34 - 32 through 38 GO 37, 38 SSM 33, 35 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 32 through 38 GO 37, 38 SSM 33, 35 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 32 through 38 GO 37, 38 SSM 33, 35 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 32 through 38 GO 37, 38 SSM 33, 35 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 32 through 38 GO 37, 38 SSM 33, 35 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 32 through 38 GO 37, 38 SSM 33, 35 Spherical...Ch. 34 - 32 through 38 GO 37, 38 SSM 33, 35 Spherical...Ch. 34 - In Fig. 34-38, a beam of parallel light rays from...Ch. 34 - A glass sphere has radius R = 5.0 cm and index of...Ch. 34 - A lens is made of glass having an index of...Ch. 34 - Figure 34-40 gives the lateral magnification m of...Ch. 34 - A movie camera with a single lens of focal length...Ch. 34 - An object is placed against the center of a thin...Ch. 34 - You produce an image of the Sun on a screen, using...Ch. 34 - An object is placed against the center of a thin...Ch. 34 - SSM WWW A double-convex lens is to be made of...Ch. 34 - An object is moved along the central axis of a...Ch. 34 - SSM An illuminated slide is held 44 cm from a...Ch. 34 - 50 through 57 GO 55, 57 SSM 53 Thin lenses. Object...Ch. 34 - 50 through 57 GO 55, 57 SSM 53 Thin lenses. Object...Ch. 34 - 50 through 57 GO 55, 57 SSM 53 Thin lenses. Object...Ch. 34 - 50 through 57 GO 55, 57 SSM 53 Thin lenses. Object...Ch. 34 - 50 through 57 GO 55, 57 SSM 53 Thin lenses. Object...Ch. 34 - 50 through 57 GO 55, 57 SSM 53 Thin lenses. Object...Ch. 34 - 50 through 57 GO 55, 57 SSM 53 Thin lenses. Object...Ch. 34 - 50 through 57 GO 55, 57 SSM 53 Thin lenses. Object...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - 58 through 67 GO 61 SSM 59 Lenses with given...Ch. 34 - In Fig. 34-44, a real inverted image I of an...Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 69 through 79 GO 76, 78 SSM 75, 77 More lenses....Ch. 34 - 80 through 87 GO 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens...Ch. 34 - 80 through 87 GO 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens...Ch. 34 - 80 through 87 GO 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens...Ch. 34 - 80 through 87 GO 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens...Ch. 34 - 80 through 87 GO 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens...Ch. 34 - 80 through 87 GO 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens...Ch. 34 - 80 through 87 GO 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens...Ch. 34 - 80 through 87 GO 80, 87 SSM WWW 83 Two-lens...Ch. 34 - If the angular magnification of an astronomical...Ch. 34 - SSM In a microscope of the type shown in the Fig....Ch. 34 - Figure 34-46a shows the basic structure of an old...Ch. 34 - SSM Figure 34-47a shows the basic structure of a...Ch. 34 - An object is 10.0 mm from the objective of a...Ch. 34 - Someone with a near point Pn of 25 cm views a...Ch. 34 - An object is placed against the center of a...Ch. 34 - 95 through 100 GO 95, 96, 99 Three-lens systems....Ch. 34 - 95 through 100 GO 95, 96, 99 Three-lens systems....Ch. 34 - 95 through 100 GO 95, 96, 99 Three-lens systems....Ch. 34 - 95 through 100 GO 95, 96, 99 Three-lens systems....Ch. 34 - 95 through 100 GO 95, 96, 99 Three-lens systems....Ch. 34 - 95 through 100 GO 95, 96, 99 Three-lens systems....Ch. 34 - SSM The formula 1/p 1/i = 1/f is called the...Ch. 34 - Figure 34-50a is an overhead view of two vertical...Ch. 34 - SSM Two thin lenses of focal lengths f1 and f2 are...Ch. 34 - Two plane mirrors are placed parallel to each...Ch. 34 - In Fig. 34-51, a box is somewhere at the left, on...Ch. 34 - In Fig. 34-52, an object is placed in front of a...Ch. 34 - SSM A fruit fly of height H sits in front of lens...Ch. 34 - You grind the lenses shown in Fig. 34-53 from flat...Ch. 34 - In Fig. 34-54, a fish watcher at point P watches a...Ch. 34 - A goldfish in a spherical fish bowl of radius R is...Ch. 34 - Figure 34-56 shows a beam expander made with two...Ch. 34 - You look down at a coin that lies at the bottom of...Ch. 34 - A pinhole camera has the hole a distance 12 cm...Ch. 34 - Light travels from point A to point B via...Ch. 34 - A point object is 10 cm away from a plane mirror,...Ch. 34 - Show that the distance between an object and its...Ch. 34 - A luminous object and a screen are a fixed...Ch. 34 - An eraser of height 1.0 cm is placed 10.0 cm in...Ch. 34 - A peanut is placed 40 cm in front of a two-lens...Ch. 34 - A coin is placed 20 cm in front of a two-lens...Ch. 34 - An object is 20 cm to the left of a thin diverging...Ch. 34 - In Fig 34-58 a pinecone is at distance p1 = 1.0 m...Ch. 34 - One end of a long glass rod n = 1.5 is a convex...Ch. 34 - A short straight object of length L lies along the...Ch. 34 - Prove that if a plane mirror is rotated through an...Ch. 34 - An object is 30.0 cm from a spherical mirror,...Ch. 34 - A concave mirror has a radius of curvature of 24...Ch. 34 - A pepper seed is placed in front of a lens. The...Ch. 34 - The equation 1/p 1/i = 2/r for spherical mirrors...Ch. 34 - A small cup of green tea is positioned on the...Ch. 34 - A 20-mm-thick layer of water n = 1.33 floats on a...Ch. 34 - A millipede sits 1.0 m in front of the nearest...Ch. 34 - a Show that if the object O in Fig. 34-19c is...Ch. 34 - Isaac Newton, having convinced himself erroneously...Ch. 34 - A narrow beam of parallel light rays is incident...Ch. 34 - A corner reflector, much used in optical,...Ch. 34 - A cheese enchilada is 4.00 cm in front of a...Ch. 34 - A grasshopper hops to a point on the central axis...Ch. 34 - In Fig. 34-60, a sand grain is 3.00 cm from thin...Ch. 34 - Suppose the farthest distance a person can see...Ch. 34 - A simple magnifier of focal length f is placed...
Additional Science Textbook Solutions
Find more solutions based on key concepts
Why are mutants used as test organisms in the Ames test?
Laboratory Experiments in Microbiology (12th Edition) (What's New in Microbiology)
What are four functions of connective tissue?
Anatomy & Physiology (6th Edition)
66. Astronauts use a centrifuge to simulate the acceleration of a rocket launch. The centrifuge takes 30 s to...
Physics for Scientists and Engineers: A Strategic Approach, Vol. 1 (Chs 1-21) (4th Edition)
Draw the enol tautomers for each of the following compounds. For compounds that have more than one enol tautome...
Organic Chemistry (8th Edition)
Write an electron configuration for each element and the corresponding Lewis structure. Indicate which electron...
Introductory Chemistry (6th Edition)
30. You know that you sound better when you sing in the shower. This has to do with the amplification of freque...
College Physics: A Strategic Approach (3rd 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.Similar questions
- 1. At 0°C a steel cable is 1km long and 1cm diameter when it is heated it expands and its resistivity increases. Calculate the change in resistance of the cable as it is heated from 0-20°C The temperature coefficient of resistance a, gives the fractional increase in resistance per °C. So increase in resistance AR = Ra.AT Where R, is the resistance at 0°C For steel a, 0.003 °C The coefficient of linear expansion a- gives the fractional increase in length per °C temperature rise. So increase in Length AL La-AT Where L, is the length at 0°C For steel a₁ = 12 x 10 °C-1 The resistivity of steel at 0°C = 1.2 x 10 Qmarrow_forward1. F E 6V 10 1.1. B a 6V b C C Apply Kirchoff's 1st law to point C for the circuit above Apply Kirchoff's 2nd Law to loops: a. ABCFA b. ABDEA C. FCDEF d. Find values for currents a,b and c Darrow_forward2. The results of the Rutherford experiment can be categorized in 3 statements. Fill in the missing words Most 11. Some III. A few State which result gives evidence that the nucleus is a. heavier than an alpha particle b. very small compared to the size of the atom c. positively charged 3. Using values in the diagram derive an expression for r .0 e marrow_forward
- 3. A 100 W light bulb is connected to 230 V mains supply by a cable with resistance 0.12. Determine the heat loss per second by the cable.arrow_forward1. The image shows electrons flowing in a conductor with cross sectional area 1mm². A electron flow • Add an arrow showing the direction of current. B • Which end has the highest potential? • Calculate the current when 1019 electrons flow through the wire in 10 s. If there are 1026 electrons per unit volume what is the drift velocity of the electrons?arrow_forwardpls helparrow_forward
- No chatgpt pls will upvote Already got wrong chatgpt answerarrow_forwardPART III - RESISTORS IN PARALLEL Consider (but do not yet build) the circuit shown in the circuit diagram to the left, which we will call Circuit 3. Make sure you are using Bert bulbs. You may want to wire two batteries in series rather than use a single battery. 7. Predict: a) How will the brightness of bulb B3A compare to the brightness to bulb B3B? c) X E B3A b) How will the brightness of bulb BзA compare to the brightness of bulb B₁ from Circuit 1? How will the currents at points X, Y, and Z be related? www d) How will the current at point X in this circuit compare to the current at point X from Circuit 1? Y Z B3B wwwarrow_forwardPART II - RESISTORS IN SERIES Consider (but do not yet build) the circuit shown in the circuit diagram to the left, which we will call Circuit 2. Make sure you are using Bert bulbs. You may want to wire two batteries in series rather than use a single battery. 4. Predict: a) How will the brightness of bulb B₂ compare to the brighness to bulb B2B? X B2A E Y B2B Ꮓ b) How will the brightness of bulb B2A compare to the brightness of bulb B₁ from Circuit 1? c) How will the currents at points X, Y, and Z be related? d) How will the current at point X in this circuit compare to the current at point X from Circuit 1?arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based TextPhysicsISBN:9781133104261Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningPhysics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...PhysicsISBN:9781133939146Author:Katz, Debora M.Publisher:Cengage LearningUniversity Physics Volume 3PhysicsISBN:9781938168185Author:William Moebs, Jeff SannyPublisher:OpenStax
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...PhysicsISBN:9781305116399Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. JewettPublisher:Cengage LearningGlencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...PhysicsISBN:9780078807213Author:Paul W. ZitzewitzPublisher:Glencoe/McGraw-HillCollege PhysicsPhysicsISBN:9781285737027Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris VuillePublisher:Cengage Learning

Principles of Physics: A Calculus-Based Text
Physics
ISBN:9781133104261
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Physics for Scientists and Engineers: Foundations...
Physics
ISBN:9781133939146
Author:Katz, Debora M.
Publisher:Cengage Learning

University Physics Volume 3
Physics
ISBN:9781938168185
Author:William Moebs, Jeff Sanny
Publisher:OpenStax

Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Technology ...
Physics
ISBN:9781305116399
Author:Raymond A. Serway, John W. Jewett
Publisher:Cengage Learning

Glencoe Physics: Principles and Problems, Student...
Physics
ISBN:9780078807213
Author:Paul W. Zitzewitz
Publisher:Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

College Physics
Physics
ISBN:9781285737027
Author:Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Convex and Concave Lenses; Author: Manocha Academy;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJ6aB5ULqa0;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY