Recent content by Bhumanyu Arun
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Work Done by Force in First 4 Secs: 0
That was such a silly mistake. Well I m 2 years younger.- Bhumanyu Arun
- Post #7
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Work Done by Force in First 4 Secs: 0
Thnx for clearing my stuff everyone. Hope to get ur support always- Bhumanyu Arun
- Post #5
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Work Done by Force in First 4 Secs: 0
Great, got it. There ain't no displacement. Coz the initial as well as final position is 2. Thanx sir.- Bhumanyu Arun
- Post #4
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Work Done by Force in First 4 Secs: 0
1. The position x of a particle moving along x-axis at time t is given by the eqn, t=(√x)+2.,where x is in m and t is in s. Find the work done by force in first 4 sec2. W=F.s=mas I first found out x using the given eqn nd then went blank as there was no force or mass given. But the ans is 0- Bhumanyu Arun
- Thread
- Force Work Work done Work done by a force
- Replies: 6
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Can the potential inside a metallic cavity electrocute someone?
Thank you sir. It really helpedn- Bhumanyu Arun
- Post #8
- Forum: Electrical Engineering
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Can the potential inside a metallic cavity electrocute someone?
:oldsurprised:Sir what you said was fine. And I perfectly agree with that. But what if we have an arbitrary shaped conductor that's hollow but has a definite thickness. Then all the charges will be accumulated on it's surface. Electric field inside it would be 0 but the potential would be...- Bhumanyu Arun
- Post #6
- Forum: Electrical Engineering
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Can the potential inside a metallic cavity electrocute someone?
My question was was that though you don't have any charge on the inner surface of a metallic cavity but still there's a potential. Can't that potential electrocute someone?- Bhumanyu Arun
- Thread
- Electrostatic Shielding
- Replies: 7
- Forum: Electrical Engineering