Transfer of Kinetic energy.
1.I am in 8th grade
2. I am 13 years old
3. Don't answer like I'm a physicist
4.Don't answer like I'm a retard
5.Do answer like I'm in High school.
Here is the question:
Kinetic energy is transferred from one object to another by transferring the energy...
Not a stupid question.
When you throw a rock, the kinetic energy from your hand is transferred from your hand to the rock thereby accelerating the rock correct? This is what I think, correct me if I am wrong.
To all the people that answered my previous questions with a "Stop posting so much and get it already!'reply, I AM 13 YEARS OLD! Of course I'm not going to get everything that you guys tell me, so instead of waiting weeks for a new answer to my thread, I post a new similar one. So next time try...
Need this simplified.
These people obviously think I'm in college. Maybe they even think I'm in high school. Well I'm not in either, you do the thinking. Someone simplify this for me.
The electron's spin can point in different directions but never changes in total amount. It always must have...
As the electrons in my...shirt spin, they are doing these things
1.Releasing energy in the form of Photons as they come in contact with other particles
2.As I move on my chair, the energy made from the kinetic energy transfers energy from the chair to my pants and vice-versa, thus
3.The...
What do they have to do with heat? What exactly can cause and electron to become exited and what exactly does the particle it comes in contact with do that causes the electron to become ''exited''? The higher the orbitals and electron spins, the shorter the wavelengths of the radiation it emits...
What determines of something absorbs light? Is it determined by the orbitals the electrons spin at, and what makes these two things special when other things like wood and metal don't
I quoted this from Hyper Physics, and I want to learn more about this, where can I? I am asking for links to places where I can learn about this ( I already know about Protons, Neutrons, Electrons and all the basic ones but now I want to get more in depth):
Baryons are massive particles...
Where can I find a lot of information on it that wasn't meant for a Quantum Physicist? I am pretty sure that once I understand that learning about EMR will be easier.