You have seen dogs shake to shed water from their fur. The motion is complicated, but the fur on a dog’s torso rotates back and forth along a roughly circular arc. Water droplets are held to the fur by contact forces, and these forces provide the centripetal acceleration that keeps the droplets moving in a circle, still attached to the fur, if the dog shakes gently. But these contact forces—like static friction—have a maximum possible value. As the dog shakes more vigorously, the contact forces cannot provide sufficient centripetal acceleration and the droplets fly off. A big dog has a torso that is approximately circular, with a radius of 16 cm. At the midpoint of a shake, the dog’s fur is moving at a remarkable 2.5 m/s. a. What force is required to keep a 10 mg water droplet moving in this circular arc? b. What is the ratio of this force to the weight of a droplet?
You have seen dogs shake to shed water from their fur. The motion is complicated, but the fur on a dog’s torso rotates back and forth along a roughly circular arc. Water droplets are held to the fur by contact forces, and these forces provide the centripetal acceleration that keeps the droplets moving in a circle, still attached to the fur, if the dog shakes gently. But these contact forces—like static friction—have a maximum possible value. As the dog shakes more vigorously, the contact forces cannot provide sufficient centripetal acceleration and the droplets fly off. A big dog has a torso that is approximately circular, with a radius of 16 cm. At the midpoint of a shake, the dog’s fur is moving at a remarkable 2.5 m/s. a. What force is required to keep a 10 mg water droplet moving in this circular arc? b. What is the ratio of this force to the weight of a droplet?
You have seen dogs shake to shed water from their fur. The motion is complicated, but the fur on a dog’s torso rotates back and forth along a roughly circular arc. Water droplets are held to the fur by contact forces, and these forces provide the centripetal acceleration that keeps the droplets moving in a circle, still attached to the fur, if the dog shakes gently. But these contact forces—like static friction—have a maximum possible value. As the dog shakes more vigorously, the contact forces cannot provide sufficient centripetal acceleration and the droplets fly off. A big dog has a torso that is approximately circular, with a radius of 16 cm. At the midpoint of a shake, the dog’s fur is moving at a remarkable 2.5 m/s.
a. What force is required to keep a 10 mg water droplet moving in this circular arc?
b. What is the ratio of this force to the weight of a droplet?
220 V is supplied to 800 primary turns of an autotransformer. What will the outputvoltage be across 200 secondary turns?
2. A filament transformer has a turns ratio of 1:20. What current must be supplied to theprimary windings if 5 A is required by the filament?
3. The filament transformer in the previous question is supplied with 150 V to theprimary side. What is the secondary voltage?
4. 440 V is supplied to 1000 primary turns of an autotransformer. If the desired outputvoltage is 100 V how many secondary turns must be tapped?
Please solve and answer thw question correctly please. Thank you!!
Please solve and answer the question correctly. Thank you!!
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