
College Physics
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781305952300
Author: Raymond A. Serway, Chris Vuille
Publisher: Cengage Learning
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Which of Newton’s laws best explains how a magician can pull a tablecloth from underneath dishes?
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- Which of the following is accurate describing the difference between colinear and concurrent forces Group of answer choices Colinear forces cannot be in different directions Concurrent forces must act in the same direction Concurrent forces do not act on the same point Colinear forces act in the same line while concurrent forces do not must pick one answer onlyarrow_forwardThe question is in the photos below. Thank you.arrow_forwardKaren is driving on the 210 freeway in her 3,500 kg Escalade when she sees Hayley driving a Tesla on the street next to the freeway. Karen immediately heads for the off ramp, which has a radius of curvature of 35 m, so she could catch her. If the coefficient of friction between the road and Karen's tires is 0.8, what is the fastest speed Karen can travel and safely make the turn? 10.4 m/s 16.6 m/s O 26.3 m/s 30.2 m/sarrow_forward
- The bird feeder has a total mass of 5 kg. Given that angle 1 is 65 degrees and angle 2 is 40 degrees, what is the magnitude of the tension force in both cables? Include 1) a free body diagram 2) Newton's second law in vector form and 3) Newton's second law in the x-direction and the y- direction, expressed in terms of variables. O, Bird foodarrow_forwardAlice and Bob had car trouble. Their car broke down and Bob could not restart it. Alice got out to push the car and after some time she asked Bob if he would trade jobs with her for a while. Bob answered, "It won't matter if I do. I took physics, and I know that no matter how hard I push on the car, it will push back on me just as hard so I won't accomplish anything. That's Newton's Third Law and it is always true. It has been tested millions of times. It wouldn't matter if I pushed the car. I wouldn't be able to push it anywhere." Aside from the fact that his relationship with Alice is probably fınished, which of the following correctly explains a flaw in Bob's logic? The third law says that the two forces he is talking about are only approximately equal. The third law does not apply in this case because the car is on wheels. O The two forces he is talking about are on two different objects. Thw two forces will not be the same because the two masses are different. The third law only…arrow_forward
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