Physics, 18.03.2022 14:00 hardworker9437
In the dark, is the current through an LDR higher or lower than in the light?
Answers: 3
Physics, 22.06.2019 14:10
Click the game tab at the bottom of the simulation and select level 1. (there is no seesaw balance for this part of the activity.) balance the first equation, and click check to see if you got it right. if you can’t balance it in the first try, you can try again. work through the five equations for level 1. click continue to go on to level 2, and later level 3. each level is more difficult than the one before. keep trying until all the equations are balanced. in one or two sentences, describe how you did in the balancing game. in a few more sentences, explain one strategy you learned for balancing more complex equations.
Answers: 2
Physics, 22.06.2019 16:00
The energy produced as a result of this flow of electrons from atom to atom is called
Answers: 3
Physics, 22.06.2019 20:30
Ahockey player of mass 82 kg is traveling north with a velocity of 4.1 meters per second he collides with the 76 kg player traveling east at 3.4 meters per second if the two players locked together momentarily in what direction will they be going immediately after the collision how fast will they be moving
Answers: 2
Physics, 22.06.2019 23:40
Certain bacteria (such as aquaspirillum magnetotacticum) tend to swim toward the earth’s geographic north pole because they contain tiny particles, called magnetosomes, that are sensitive to a magnetic field. if a transmission line carrying 100 a is laid underwater, at what range of distances would the magnetic field from this line be great enough to interfere with the migration of these bacteria? (assume that a field less than 5% of the earth’s field would have little effect on the bacteria. take the earth’s field to be 5.0 * 10-5 t, and ignore the effects of the seawater.)
Answers: 1
In the dark, is the current through an LDR higher or lower than in the light?...
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