Raymond Ye Mr. Pettibone IB Physics 2 November 2013 Internal Assessment DESIGN Aspect 1: How does the time a rubber band spends stretching a force of 12.5 N affect the force required to break/snap the rubber band? IV- The time spent stretching the rubber band 12.5 N DV- The force required to break/snap the band Units for Independent Variable- Minutes Units for Dependent Variable- Newtons Aspect 2: Variables that will be kept the same include: -The force of the stretch -Conditions
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1 Physics and Measurement CHAPTER OUTLINE 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Standards of Length‚ Mass‚ and Time Matter and Model-Building Density and Atomic Mass Dimensional Analysis Conversion of Units Estimates and Order-ofMagnitude Calculations Significant Figures ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Q1.1 Q1.2 Atomic clocks are based on electromagnetic waves which atoms emit. Also‚ pulsars are highly regular astronomical clocks. Density varies with temperature and pressure. It would be necessary to measure both
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This year in science‚ we were paired up in groups to build a car powered only by a rubber band. There was a lot of physics and thought put behind the planning of our car. The rubber band moved the car by storing up elastic potential energy which then turned into kinetic energy when released. Newton’s Laws of Motion also come in handy when thinking about how to keep the car moving. “An object in motion stays in motion.” There was also a lot of thought put into the wheels. We had to be aware of the
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PHYSICS science that deals with matter‚ energy‚ motion and force. BRANCHES OF PHYSICS Acoustics studies the production and properties of sound. Atomic physics examines the structure‚ properties‚ and behavior of the atom. Biophysics applies the tools and techniques of physics to the study of living things and the life processes. Cryogenics is the study of extremely low temperatures. Electrodynamics analyses the relationship between electrical and magnetic forces. Fluid physics deals with
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buying a Physics book to use as their reference material while studying physics‚ and because we think that I.T can be about Physics in some ways‚ our group decided to create and design a website that contains stuffs about College Physics which is composed of the following: * History of Physics * Branches of Physics (Branches of Classical Physics and Modern Physics) * Significance of Physics. * Tribute to the greatest Physicians and their contributions to advancement of Physics *
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.Physics is the field of scince that controls the Earth‚ the Moon‚ the Sun and the Universe It is the science of matter and its motion‚ space-time and energy. Physics describes many forms of energy - such as kinetic energy‚ electrical energy‚ and mass; and the way energy can change from one form to another. Everything surrounding to us is made of matter and Physics explains matter as combinations of fundamental particles which are interacting through fundamental forces. It will not be an exaggeration
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km 5 93 3 106 mi 3.8 3 105 km 5 2.4 3 105 mi 3500 km < 2160 mi 1.4 × 106 km < 864‚000 mi LibraryPirate PHYSICS LABORATORY EXPERIMENTS S e v e n t h E d i t i o n Jerry D. Wilson Lander University Cecilia A. HernÁndez-Hall American River College Australia • Brazil • Japan • Korea • Mexico • Singapore • Spain • United Kingdom • United States LibraryPirate Physics
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Wilson‚ College Physics‚ 6th Edition Chapter 9 Exercises MC = Multiple Choice Question‚ CQ = Conceptual Question‚ and IE = Integrated Exercise. Throughout the text‚ many exercise sections will include “paired” exercises. These exercise pairs‚ identified with red numbers‚ are intended to assist you in problem solving and learning. In a pair‚ the first exercise (even numbered) is worked out in the Study Guide so that you can consult it should you need assistance in solving it. The second exercise
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............................3 -Ballista Basic Information......................................................................3 -History of a Ballista................................................................................3 -Physics of a Ballista..............................................................................3‚4 -Results...................................................................................................4‚5 -Conclusion.....................
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In Newtonian physics‚ free fall is any motion of a body where its weight is the only force acting upon it. In the context of general relativity‚ where gravitation is reduced to a space-time curvature‚ a body in free fall has no force acting on it and it moves along a geodesic. The present article only concerns itself with free fall in the Newtonian domain. An object in the technical sense of free fall may not necessarily be falling down in the usual sense of the term. An object moving upwards
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