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    Physics Trolley Lab

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    Grade  9  Science  –  Trolley   Lab       -­‐  Luca  Weller  –  AOI:  Environment  –   17/9/13   D.4  Materials:   -­‐1  trolley  that  will  be  accelerated   -­‐1  string  to  connect  the  trolley  and               the  weights  (ca.  2m)   -­‐1  set  of  weights  that  will  accelerate   the  trolley  (up  to  5N)   -­‐1  a.m

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    Physics Lab

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    hit the ground exactly. 3. When counting the dots we could have missed counted the dots because they were small and faint. Conclusion: The acceleration of the 50 g rate weight was .10 greater than the weight of the 100 g weight; however‚ this is attributed to our sources of error. Therefore‚ we concluded that mass does not affect the acceleration due to

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    Physics Lab Report

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    ABSTRACT: The lab of one dimensional motion is a series of experiments that deal with different types of motion in a single direction. In the first experiment‚ one dimensional motion of a small cart on an air track is measured in a one photogate system. The acceleration was calculated by the infrared light emitting electrode of the photogate sensing the slacks on the picket fence. The calculation for gravity yielded 9.63 m/s^2‚ which is consistent with the accepted value of 9.8m/s^2. In the

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    Momentum Lab

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    (Vertical Acceleration) x (Time)2 0.92m = (1/2) x (9.8m/s2) x (Time)2 Time = ((2 x 0.92m)/(9.8m/s2))1/2 = 0.43s Horizontal displacement = (Initial horizontal velocity) x (Time) 0.43m = (Initial horizontal velocity) x (0.43s) Initial horizontal velocity = Initial velocity = (0.43m/0.43s) = 1.0m/s Initial Momentum = (Mass) x (Initial Velocity) P0 = (0.008kg) x (1.0m/s) = 0.008kgm/s Time =((2 x Displacement)/(Acceleration))1/2 Using vertical displacement and acceleration: Time

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    Labs

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    African Diaspora and the World After reading the short story “Diaspora” by Joanne Hyppolite‚ I got a vivid understanding of how diaspora can have an effect on one’s identity. Over the past month we have studied many theories and concepts concerning race‚ gender‚ and politics. There are three theories that capture the essence of Joanne Hyppolite’s worldview as a Haitian growing up in America: intersectionality‚ identity‚ and diaspora. Individuals oftentimes experience the theory of Intersectionality

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    Compressor Lab

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    University of Trinidad & Tobago S.F.T.I Campus Lab: Chemical Kinetics Name: Christopher Boodram Aketta Wylie Simeon Mohammed #110004795 Salomon Samaroo #111006223 Program: Chemical Engineering Technology * Cohort: 11 * Course: Physical Chemistry and Thermodynamics * Course Code: PCTH210D * Instructor: Title : Centrifugal Compressor Introduction: The equipment comprises of a 7-stage centrifugal compressor

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    Atwood motion lab

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    Mr. Moss THE LAB OF ATWOOD Procedure: The purpose of this experiment was to verify the predictions of Newton’s Law for an Atwood machine‚ a simple machine constructed by hanging two different masses and from a string passing over pulleys and observing their acceleration.. Newton’s Law predicts that the acceleration should be proportional to the difference between the masses and proportional to their sum‚ where = 9.8 m/s2 is the acceleration due to gravity.

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    Neptune and Triton is a life-sized marble sculpture made by an Italian artist Gian Lorenzo Bernini which was commissioned by Cardinal Alessandro Peretti Montalto in 1622. [Figure 1] It depicts the figure of Neptune and his son Triton‚ captured mid-movement as they play out their roles in the narrative to which this scene belongs. Bernini uses his talent and artistic skills to create an illusion of action‚ an atmosphere of anticipation as we wait for the figures to come alive and break free from

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    Incline Motion Lab

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    Incline Lab Purpose – The purpose of this experiment was to find how position and time are related to a ball on an incline. Data – 7 Books X (cm) | Trial 1 (s) | Trial 2 (s) | Trial 3 (s) | Average (s) | 10 | 0.336 | 0.3654 | 0.3434 | 0.3479 | 15 | 0.3952 | 0.4262 | 0.43 | 0.4171 | 50 | 0.9127 | 0.8846 | 0.8936 | 0.8971 | 75 | 1.1257 | 1.1178 | 1.1322 | 1.1252 | 100 | 1.320 | 1.2788 | 1.2979 | 1.2989 | 125 | 1.4924 | 1.4966 | 1.4766 | 1.4885 | 4 Books X (cm) | Trial 1 (s) |

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    Spring Constant Lab

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    to obtain and compare the spring constants of 3 strings (soft‚ medium‚ and hard) obtained in 2 ways (using the energy chapter and the dynamics chapter)‚ to confirm that Hooke’s Law is valid over a range of initial displacements‚ and to find the acceleration due to gravity on unknown Planet X. Problem: What are the spring constants of 3 strings (soft‚ medium‚ and hard) and how do they compare? Theory: To find the spring constants of each string‚ we can calculate the velocity that the string is moving

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