Caterpillar Pellets The larvae (caterpillars) of certain species of butterflies and moths construct shelters on a host plant out of folded or rolled leaves secured with silk threads. Many of those types of caterpillars eliminate waste by ejecting fecal pellets (frass) at high speeds so that the pellets are projected far away from the caterpillar and its shelter. Various explanations for this behavior have been proposed, but some studies have shown that it may help keep predatory insects such as wasps from locating the caterpillars by homing in on the odor of caterpillar frass. Video microscopy has been used to study the pellet ejection process In one study, the video images reveal that a group of Brazilian skipper caterpillars that are about 50 mm long eject pellets at angles between 10° and 40° above the horizontal. There is no correlation between the size of the pellet and the angle at which it is ejected, but larger pellets are shot with lower speeds, as shown in Figure 4-35 . The pellets are small and dense enough that at the speeds at which they travel air resistance is negligible. Figure 4-35 Problem 88, 89, 90 and 91 91. •• What is the maximum range of a 5-mg pellet that lands at the same height from which it is ejected? A. 14 cm B. 20 cm C. 40 cm D. 78 cm
Caterpillar Pellets The larvae (caterpillars) of certain species of butterflies and moths construct shelters on a host plant out of folded or rolled leaves secured with silk threads. Many of those types of caterpillars eliminate waste by ejecting fecal pellets (frass) at high speeds so that the pellets are projected far away from the caterpillar and its shelter. Various explanations for this behavior have been proposed, but some studies have shown that it may help keep predatory insects such as wasps from locating the caterpillars by homing in on the odor of caterpillar frass. Video microscopy has been used to study the pellet ejection process In one study, the video images reveal that a group of Brazilian skipper caterpillars that are about 50 mm long eject pellets at angles between 10° and 40° above the horizontal. There is no correlation between the size of the pellet and the angle at which it is ejected, but larger pellets are shot with lower speeds, as shown in Figure 4-35 . The pellets are small and dense enough that at the speeds at which they travel air resistance is negligible. Figure 4-35 Problem 88, 89, 90 and 91 91. •• What is the maximum range of a 5-mg pellet that lands at the same height from which it is ejected? A. 14 cm B. 20 cm C. 40 cm D. 78 cm
The larvae (caterpillars) of certain species of butterflies and moths construct shelters on a host plant out of folded or rolled leaves secured with silk threads. Many of those types of caterpillars eliminate waste by ejecting fecal pellets (frass) at high speeds so that the pellets are projected far away from the caterpillar and its shelter. Various explanations for this behavior have been proposed, but some studies have shown that it may help keep predatory insects such as wasps from locating the caterpillars by homing in on the odor of caterpillar frass.
Video microscopy has been used to study the pellet ejection process In one study, the video images reveal that a group of Brazilian skipper caterpillars that are about 50 mm long eject pellets at angles between 10° and 40° above the horizontal. There is no correlation between the size of the pellet and the angle at which it is ejected, but larger pellets are shot with lower speeds, as shown in Figure 4-35. The pellets are small and dense enough that at the speeds at which they travel air resistance is negligible.
Figure 4-35
Problem 88, 89, 90 and 91
91. •• What is the maximum range of a 5-mg pellet that lands at the same height from which it is ejected?
Water from the faucet is supplied to the hose at a rate of 0.00057 m3/s.
At what speed (number of meters per second) does the water exit the nozzle if the cross sectional area of the narrow nozzle is 2.1 x 10-6 m2?
Jason Fruits/Indiana University Research Communications
Silver/
silver oxide
Zinc
zinc/oxide
Car P moves to the west with constant speed v0 along a straight road. Car Q starts from rest at instant 1, and moves to the west with increasing speed. At instant 5, car Q has speed w0 relative to the road (w0 < v0). Instants 1-5 are separated by equal time intervals. At instant 3, cars P and Q are adjacent to one another (i.e., they have the same position). In the reference frame o f the road, at instant 3 i s the speed o f car Q greater than, less than, or equal to the speed of car P? Explain.
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