The second one does it much more often. He gets excited when eating, so the only way he can actually eat a meal is if his owners hold him and constantly stroke him to keep him calm.
Awww, puppy!
Dana: No it wouldn't.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
The second one does it much more often. He gets excited when eating, so the only way he can actually eat a meal is if his owners hold him and constantly stroke him to keep him calm.
Awww, puppy!
Dana: No it wouldn't.
Don't you need calculus to solve this?
Um, you don't if you know the equation. There is also a trick of geometry (for cases like this) that will let you avoid the calculus.
eta: I think. There is for one part of question 2, at least.
1) You are driving a car, and you accelerate from 0 to 25 mph. Say the amount of energy required is x. Now you continue to accelerate from 25 mph to 50 mph. What is the total amount of energy you used to accelerate from 0 to 50 mph?
I think that it's 2X, because you can't just go from 25 to 50.
2) You drop a heavy object from a height of 10 feet, and when it hits the ground it has a velocity of y. What would be the velocity if you drop it from 20 feet? From 40 feet?
still y. (9.8 meters per second)
Isn't it always y, no matter the height?
Hint: No. Ignoring issues of air friction, a falling object will continue to accelerate, so the farther it falls, the faster it will be going when it reaches the ground.
Curses! Physics triumphs over Tep!Intuition yet again!
Would it be weird to close my office door so I could chair-dance to Rage Against the Machine?
leave door open. own it.
still y. (9.8 meters per second)
You're thinking of acceleration due to gravity, which is 9.8 meters per secondĀ² (or 9.8 meters per second per second. The first "per second" is the velocity, the second is how much the velocity increases each second.)
leave door open. own it.
Ha ha ha. No.
You're thinking of acceleration due to gravity, which is 9.8 meters per secondĀ² (or 9.8 meters per second per second. The first "per second" is the velocity, the second is how much the velocity increases each second.)
Hey, I remembered something from physics. I say go, me.
Well, it depends on the object, doesn't it? Some reach terminal velocity. Like cats, falling out of a window. They're safer falling from higher stories, because they reach terminal velocity and have a chance to right themselves before hitting ground.
Well, it depends on the object, doesn't it? Some reach terminal velocity. Like cats, falling out of a window. They're safer falling from higher stories, because they reach terminal velocity and have a chance to right themselves before hitting ground.
Yeah. Except the terminal velocity is due to wind friction. Which we're ignoring here (but I suppose ignoring wind friction would make the question less intuitive.)
Anyway, I'm gonna start answering the questions. What will take more time is explaining the answers.