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- Question #05f5e - Socratic
The tension on cable is the sum of the man's and the elevator's weights Tension=G+ Gelevator When the elevator is accelerated downwards, there is an inertia force in the reverse direction This inertial force reduces the weight on the bathroom scale inertial force=691-499=299N Now ,let use the Newton's second law of motion F = m ⋅ a m:mass
- Who is J. J Thomson? - Socratic
"Joseph John Thomson, 1856-1940 " See this site It was said of him posthumously that, "He, more than any other man, was responsible for the" "fundamental change in outlook which distinguishes" "the physics of this century from that of the last " Thomson was a full professor at 28 years of age (an amazing accomplishment, and a tribute to his peers who unjealously recognized his precocious
- Question #60ea4 + Example - Socratic
adjectives describe the noun, whereas adverbs describe the verb For example, tall is an adjective "The TALL man waved to me " Quickly is an adverb (as a rule, adverbs end in -LY) "The tall man QUICKLY leaped over the fence "
- Question #01d26 - Socratic
Suppose a man is walking in the yellow colored direction with velocity V 1 and rain is falling from the sky with velocity V 2 According to the picture given the ∠ACB is θ
- What is the strongest power ever found? - Socratic
It depends on what do you mean by power In physics, "power" = "energy consumed" "time", which will be in "Watts" Like Saturn V produced about 41 MW of power The Fat Man used 84 TJ of energy in 10 microseconds (approx) So the we are talking about 8 4times10^19 Watts The Tsar Bomba , THE most powerful nuclear weapon ever detonated yielded about 10^22 Watts But these were man made
- Question #21139 - Socratic
Here is a picture painting of Woodrow Wison Just a side note: Woodrow Wilson was more of a peaceable man and tried to keep the US out of World War I After the war, Wilson drafted the Fourteen Points, which a statement of principles for peace for peace negotiations His efforts to make peace and stay at peace were tremendous and some paid off at the end Hope this helps!
- Question #15a92 - Socratic
Religion and Science - never the twain will meet! Galileo did not use religious belief to support science This is the shortest answer I can give you In fact it was exactly the opposite, he was persecuted for his scientific beliefs by the Catholic church Like most people of the time he was reportedly a Christian, and although described as devout by many current Christian texts there is
- Who took the throne in Macedonia after King Philip II was . . . - Socratic
Alexander the Great Alexander III of Macedon was a son of Philip II Alexander quickly was declared king after Philip was assassinated (336 BCE) The question to ask at this point is - who killed Philip II? The man who actually did the deed was Pausanias, who was a member of the King's bodyguards The murder was committed as Philip attended pubic celebrations for his daughter's marriage and
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