Recent content by zyphriss2
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Rate of change of radius through a a circular wire loop?
A circular wire loop of radius r = 19 cm is immersed in a uniform magnetic field B = 0.690 T with its plane normal to the direction of the field. If the field magnitude then decreases at a constant rate of −1.0×10^-2 T/s, at what rate should r increase so that the induced emf within the loop is...- zyphriss2
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- Change Circular Loop Radius Rate Rate of change Wire
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Torque on a small loop by a large loop?
A small loop of wire of radius 2.0 cm is placed at the center of a wire loop with radius 24 cm. The planes of the loops are perpendicular to each other, and a 6.0 -A current flows in each. Estimate the magnitude of the torque the large loop exerts on the smaller one. I know the rules but I...- zyphriss2
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- Loop Torque
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Q/m of a particle in a straight line.
What is the value of q/m for a particle that moves in a circle of radius 6.2 mm in a 0.56 T magnetic field if a crossed 220 V/m electric field will make the path straight? q/m=2v/(br)^2 This was given to us in our lab and i plugged everything in and it doesn't turn out right...- zyphriss2
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- Line Particle Straight line
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Finding Fourier Expansion of f(t): Part b & c
Find the Fourier expansion of one period of f(t)=1+t absolute value of t<1 I found this to be 1+2/pi Sigma(0 to infinity) ((-1^(n+1))/n)sinnpit by just the standard methods of the a0 an and bn formuals, which I know is correct Now the parts I am having problems with is part b and c...- zyphriss2
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- Expansion Fourier Fourier expansion
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- Forum: Calculus and Beyond Homework Help
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How Do You Calculate Voltage Drop in a Copper Wire?
Compute the voltage drop along a 25 m length of household no. 14 copper wire (used in 15A circuits). The wire has diameter 1.628 mm and carries a 15 A current. Vdrop=I*R R=rho(L/A) I just plugged the resistivity of copper wire which is 1.72*10^-8, length, and area into find the...- zyphriss2
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- Drop Voltage Voltage drop Wire
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Circuits capacitors, voltage and charge problem.
A. Suppose in the figure that C1 = C2 = C3 = 54.2 microfarads and C4 = 68.1 microfarads. If the charge on C2 is Q2 = 62.4 microfarads determine the charge on each of the other capacitors. B. charge=voltage*capacitance series equivalent capacitance=1/c1 + 1/c2 + 1/c3 + ...- zyphriss2
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- Capacitors Charge Circuits Voltage
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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How Fast Will a Charged Sphere Move Along the Axis of a Ring Charge?
A 13.4 cm radius thin ring carries a uniformly distributed 14.8 microC charge. A small 8.2 g sphere with a charge of 2.4 microC is placed exactly at the center of the ring and given a very small push so it moves along the ring axis (+ x axis). How fast will the sphere be moving when it is 1.8...- zyphriss2
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- Charge Ring Sphere
- Replies: 2
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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Electric field at point p if p is on a bisector between two opposite charges
Homework Statement Determine magnitude of the electric field at the point P. The two charges are separated by a distance of 2a. Point P is on the perpendicular bisector of the line joining the charges, a distance x from the midpoint between them. Express your answer in terms of Q, x, a, and k...- zyphriss2
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- Charges Electric Electric field Field Point
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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How far apart are two stars resolved by a 68-cm telescope?
I have worked it out both ways and both of the answers i got were wrong- zyphriss2
- Post #3
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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How far apart are two stars resolved by a 68-cm telescope?
Homework Statement Two stars 18 light-years away are barely resolved by a 68 -cm (mirror diameter) telescope. How far apart are the stars? Assume \lambda = 540 <units>nm</units> and that the resolution is limited by diffraction. Express your answer using two significant figures...- zyphriss2
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- Stars
- Replies: 3
- Forum: Advanced Physics Homework Help
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How Much Pressure Is Required to Compress an Iron Block by 0.16%?
How much pressure is needed to compress the volume of an iron block by 0.16 \%? Express your answer in {\rm{N/m}}^2. I know pressure is the same as stress, and that stress is force/csa. Could someone point me in the right direction.- zyphriss2
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- Iron Pressure
- Replies: 1
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Calculate Stress & Strain of Marble Column - 1.5m^2, 2.5x10^4kg
This was all that was given to me in the problem...does anyone have any clue.- zyphriss2
- Post #3
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Calculate Stress & Strain of Marble Column - 1.5m^2, 2.5x10^4kg
A marble column of cross-sectional area 1.5 m^2 supports a mass of 2.5×10^4 kg. What is the stress within the column? What is the strain? I have already found the stress in the column by taking (25000kgx9.8 m/s^2)/1.5m^2 The problem is i have no clue how to find the strain given...- zyphriss2
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- Strain Stress Stress and strain
- Replies: 2
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Solving for Initial Bullet Speed: Mass, Spring, and Friction
Thank you very much I got it correct.- zyphriss2
- Post #8
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help
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Solving for Initial Bullet Speed: Mass, Spring, and Friction
I found that the velocity is = to .9495 m/s, I found this using .5mv^2 - force of friction*distance the spring compressed=.5kx^2. is this correct and from here would I just plug this velocity into mbullet*velocitybullet= m(bullet+block)*.9495?- zyphriss2
- Post #7
- Forum: Introductory Physics Homework Help