EBK PHYSICS - 5th Edition - by Walker - ISBN 8220103026918

EBK PHYSICS
5th Edition
Walker
Publisher: PEARSON
ISBN: 8220103026918

Solutions for EBK PHYSICS

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Chapter 2.2 - Average Speed And VelocityChapter 2.3 - Instantaneous VelocityChapter 2.4 - AccelerationChapter 2.5 - Motion With Constant AccelerationChapter 2.6 - Applications Of The Equations Of MotionChapter 2.7 - Freely Falling ObjectsChapter 3 - Vectors In PhysicsChapter 3.1 - Scalars Versus VectorsChapter 3.2 - The Components Of A VectorChapter 3.3 - Adding And Subtracting VectorsChapter 3.4 - Unit VectorsChapter 3.5 - Position, Displacement, Velocity, And Acceleration VectorsChapter 3.6 - Relative MotionChapter 4 - Two-Dimensional KinematicsChapter 4.1 - Motion In Two DimensionsChapter 4.2 - Projectile Motion: Basic EquationsChapter 4.3 - Zero Launch AngleChapter 4.4 - General Launch AngleChapter 4.5 - Projectile Motion: Key CharacteristicsChapter 5 - Newton’s Laws Of MotionChapter 5.1 - Force And MassChapter 5.2 - Newton’s First Law Of MotionChapter 5.3 - Newton’s Second Law Of MotionChapter 5.4 - Newton’s Third Law Of MotionChapter 5.5 - The Vector Nature Of Forces: Forces In Two DimensionsChapter 5.6 - WeightChapter 5.7 - Normal ForcesChapter 6 - Applications Of Newton’s LawsChapter 6.1 - Frictional ForcesChapter 6.2 - Strings And SpringsChapter 6.3 - Translational EquilibriumChapter 6.4 - Connected ObjectsChapter 6.5 - Circular MotionChapter 7 - Work And Kinetic EnergyChapter 7.1 - Work Done By A Constant ForceChapter 7.2 - Kinetic Energy And The Work–Energy TheoremChapter 7.3 - Work Done By A Variable ForceChapter 7.4 - PowerChapter 8 - Potential Energy And Conservation Of EnergyChapter 8.1 - Conservative And Nonconservative ForcesChapter 8.2 - Potential Energy And The Work Done By Conservative ForcesChapter 8.3 - Conservation Of Mechanical EnergyChapter 8.4 - Work Done By Nonconservative ForcesChapter 8.5 - Potential Energy Curves And EquipotentialsChapter 9 - Linear Momentum And CollisionsChapter 9.1 - Linear MomentumChapter 9.2 - Momentum And Newton’s Second LawChapter 9.3 - ImpulseChapter 9.4 - Conservation Of Linear MomentumChapter 9.5 - Inelastic CollisionsChapter 9.6 - Elastic CollisionsChapter 9.7 - Center Of MassChapter 9.8 - Systems With Changing Mass: Rocket PropulsionChapter 10 - Rotational Kinematics And EnergyChapter 10.1 - Angular Position, Velocity, And AccelerationChapter 10.2 - Rotational KinematicsChapter 10.3 - Connections Between Linear And Rotational QuantitiesChapter 10.4 - Rolling MotionChapter 10.5 - Rotational Kinetic Energy And The Moment Of InertiaChapter 10.6 - Conservation Of EnergyChapter 11 - Rotational Dynamics And Static EquilibriumChapter 11.1 - TorqueChapter 11.2 - Torque And Angular AccelerationChapter 11.3 - Zero Torque And Static EquilibriumChapter 11.4 - Center Of Mass And BalanceChapter 11.5 - Dynamic Applications Of TorqueChapter 11.6 - Angular MomentumChapter 11.7 - Conservation Of Angular MomentumChapter 11.8 - Rotational Work And PowerChapter 11.9 - The Vector Nature Of Rotational MotionChapter 12 - GravityChapter 12.1 - Newton’s Law Of Universal GravitationChapter 12.2 - Gravitational Attraction Of Spherical BodiesChapter 12.3 - Kepler’s Laws Of Orbital MotionChapter 12.4 - Gravitational Potential EnergyChapter 12.5 - Energy ConservationChapter 12.6 - TidesChapter 13 - Oscillations About EquilibriumChapter 13.1 - Periodic MotionChapter 13.2 - Simple Harmonic MotionChapter 13.3 - Connections Between Uniform Circular Motion And Simple Harmonic MotionChapter 13.4 - The Period Of A Mass On A SpringChapter 13.5 - Energy Conservation In Oscillatory MotionChapter 13.6 - The PendulumChapter 13.7 - Damped OscillationsChapter 13.8 - Driven Oscillations And ResonanceChapter 14 - Waves And SoundChapter 14.1 - Types Of WavesChapter 14.2 - Waves On A StringChapter 14.3 - Harmonic Wave FunctionsChapter 14.4 - Sound WavesChapter 14.5 - Sound IntensityChapter 14.6 - The Doppler EffectChapter 14.7 - Superposition And InterferenceChapter 14.8 - Standing WavesChapter 14.9 - BeatsChapter 15 - FluidsChapter 15.1 - DensityChapter 15.2 - PressureChapter 15.3 - Static Equilibrium In Fluids: Pressure And DepthChapter 15.4 - Archimedes’ Principle And BuoyancyChapter 15.5 - Applications Of Archimedes’ PrincipleChapter 15.6 - Fluid Flow And ContinuityChapter 15.7 - Bernoulli’s EquationChapter 15.8 - Applications Of Bernoulli’s EquationChapter 15.9 - Viscosity And Surface TensionChapter 16 - Temperature And HeatChapter 16.1 - Temperature And The Zeroth Law Of ThermodynamicsChapter 16.2 - Temperature ScalesChapter 16.3 - Thermal ExpansionChapter 16.4 - Heat And Mechanical WorkChapter 16.5 - Specific HeatsChapter 16.6 - Conduction, Convection, And RadiationChapter 17 - Phases And Phase ChangesChapter 17.1 - Ideal GasesChapter 17.2 - The Kinetic Theory Of GasesChapter 17.3 - Solids And Elastic DeformationChapter 17.4 - Phase Equilibrium And EvaporationChapter 17.5 - Latent HeatsChapter 17.6 - Phase Changes And Energy ConservationChapter 18 - The Laws Of ThermodynamicsChapter 18.1 - The Zeroth Law Of ThermodynamicsChapter 18.2 - The First Law Of ThermodynamicsChapter 18.3 - Thermal ProcessesChapter 18.4 - Specific Heats For An Ideal Gas: Constant Pressure, Constant VolumeChapter 18.5 - The Second Law Of ThermodynamicsChapter 18.6 - Heat Engines And The Carnot CycleChapter 18.7 - Refrigerators, Air Conditioners, And Heat PumpsChapter 18.8 - EntropyChapter 18.9 - Order, Disorder, And EntropyChapter 18.10 - The Third Law Of ThermodynamicsChapter 19 - Electric Charges, Forces, And FieldsChapter 19.1 - Electric ChargeChapter 19.2 - Insulators And ConductorsChapter 19.3 - Coulomb’s LawChapter 19.4 - The Electric FieldChapter 19.5 - Electric Field LinesChapter 19.6 - Shielding And Charging By InductionChapter 19.7 - Electric Flux And Gauss’s LawChapter 20 - Electric Potential And Electric Potential EnergyChapter 20.1 - Electric Potential Energy And The Electric PotentialChapter 20.2 - Energy ConservationChapter 20.3 - The Electric Potential Of Point ChargesChapter 20.4 - Equipotential Surfaces And The Electric FieldChapter 20.5 - Capacitors And DielectricsChapter 20.6 - Electrical Energy StorageChapter 21 - Electric Current And Direct-Current CircuitsChapter 21.1 - Electric CurrentChapter 21.2 - Resistance And Ohm’s LawChapter 21.3 - Energy And Power In Electric CircuitsChapter 21.4 - Resistors In Series And ParallelChapter 21.5 - Kirchhoff’s RulesChapter 21.6 - Circuits Containing CapacitorsChapter 21.7 - Rc CircuitsChapter 22 - MagnetismChapter 22.1 - The Magnetic FieldChapter 22.2 - The Magnetic Force On Moving ChargesChapter 22.3 - The Motion Of Charged Particles In A Magnetic FieldChapter 22.4 - The Magnetic Force Exerted On A Current-Carrying WireChapter 22.5 - Loops Of Current And Magnetic TorqueChapter 22.6 - Electric Currents, Magnetic Fields, And Ampère’s LawChapter 22.7 - Current Loops And SolenoidsChapter 23 - Magnetic Flux And Faraday’s Law Of InductionChapter 23.1 - Induced Electromotive ForceChapter 23.2 - Magnetic FluxChapter 23.3 - Faraday’s Law Of InductionChapter 23.4 - Lenz’s LawChapter 23.5 - Mechanical Work And Electrical EnergyChapter 23.6 - Generators And MotorsChapter 23.7 - InductanceChapter 23.8 - Rl CircuitsChapter 23.9 - Energy Stored In A Magnetic FieldChapter 23.10 - TransformersChapter 24 - Alternating-Current CircuitsChapter 24.1 - Alternating Voltages And CurrentsChapter 24.2 - Capacitors In Ac CircuitsChapter 24.3 - Rc CircuitsChapter 24.4 - Inductors In Ac CircuitsChapter 24.5 - Rlc CircuitsChapter 24.6 - Resonance In Electric CircuitsChapter 25 - Electromagnetic WaveChapter 25.1 - The Production Of Electromagnetic WavesChapter 25.2 - The Propagation Of Electromagnetic WavesChapter 25.3 - The Electromagnetic SpectrumChapter 25.4 - Energy And Momentum In Electromagnetic WavesChapter 25.5 - PolarizationChapter 26 - Geometrical OpticsChapter 26.1 - The Reflection Of LightChapter 26.2 - Forming Images With A Plane MirrorChapter 26.3 - Spherical MirrorsChapter 26.4 - Ray Tracing And The Mirror EquationChapter 26.5 - The Refraction Of LightChapter 26.6 - Ray Tracing For LensesChapter 26.7 - The Thin-Lens EquationChapter 26.8 - Dispersion And The RainbowChapter 27 - Optical InstrumentsChapter 27.1 - The Human Eye And The CameraChapter 27.2 - Lenses In Combination And Corrective OpticsChapter 27.3 - The Magnifying GlassChapter 27.4 - The Compound MicroscopeChapter 27.5 - TelescopesChapter 27.6 - Lens AberrationsChapter 28 - Physical Optics: Interference And DiffractionChapter 28.1 - Superposition And InterferenceChapter 28.2 - Young’s Two-slit ExperimentChapter 28.3 - Interference In Reflected WavesChapter 28.4 - DiffractionChapter 28.5 - ResolutionChapter 28.6 - Diffraction GratingsChapter 29 - RelativityChapter 29.1 - The Postulates Of Special RelativityChapter 29.2 - The Relativity Of Time And Time DilationChapter 29.3 - The Relativity Of Length And Length ContractionChapter 29.4 - The Relativistic Addition Of VelocitiesChapter 29.5 - Relativistic MomentumChapter 29.6 - Relativistic Energy And E=mc2Chapter 29.7 - The Relativistic UniverseChapter 29.8 - General RelativityChapter 30 - Quantum PhysicsChapter 30.1 - Blackbody Radiation And Planck’s Hypothesis Of Quantized EnergyChapter 30.2 - Photons And The Photoelectric EffectChapter 30.3 - The Mass And Momentum Of A PhotonChapter 30.4 - Photon Scattering And The Compton EffectChapter 30.5 - The De Broglie Hypothesis And Wave–Particle DualityChapter 30.6 - The Heisenberg Uncertainty PrincipleChapter 30.7 - Quantum TunnelingChapter 31 - Atomic PhysicsChapter 31.1 - Early Models Of The AtomChapter 31.2 - The Spectrum Of Atomic HydrogenChapter 31.3 - Bohr’s Model Of The Hydrogen AtomChapter 31.4 - De Broglie Waves And The Bohr ModelChapter 31.5 - The Quantum Mechanical Hydrogen AtomChapter 31.6 - Multielectron Atoms And The Periodic TableChapter 31.7 - Atomic RadiationChapter 32 - Nuclear Physics And Nuclear RadiationChapter 32.1 - The Constituents And Structure Of NucleiChapter 32.2 - RadioactivityChapter 32.3 - Half-Life And Radioactive DatingChapter 32.4 - Nuclear Binding EnergyChapter 32.5 - Nuclear FissionChapter 32.6 - Nuclear FusionChapter 32.7 - Practical Applications Of Nuclear PhysicsChapter 32.8 - Elementary ParticlesChapter 32.9 - Unified Forces And Cosmology

Book Details

Intended for algebra-based introductory physics courses.     An accessible, problem-solving approach to physics, grounded in real-world applications James Walker’s Physics provides students with a solid conceptual understanding of physics that can be expr

More Editions of This Book

Corresponding editions of this textbook are also available below:

Physics, Books a la Carte Plus Mastering Physics with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package (5th Edition)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780134032610
Modified Mastering Physics with Pearson eText -- Access Card -- for Physics (18-Weeks)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780136781356
Physics (5th Edition)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780134051802
Physics, Books a la Carte Edition (5th Edition)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780134020853
EBK PHYSICS
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780134051796
EP PHYSICS -MOD.MASTERING (18W)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780136782490
Physics (5th Edition)
5th Edition
ISBN: 9780321976444
Physics
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780131194946
Physics, Vol. Ii
1st Edition
ISBN: 9780130270542
Physics: Ap Edition
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9780131960671
Physics
4th Edition
ISBN: 9780321611116
Physics Technology Update + MasteringPhysics With eBook Access Card
4th Edition
ISBN: 9780321903037

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