| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 3.39 |
| Score | 0% | 68% |
Friction resists movement in a direction __________ to the movement.
opposite |
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parallel |
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perpendicular |
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normal |
Friction resists movement. Kinetic (also called sliding or dynamic) friction resists movement in a direction opposite to the movement. Because it opposes movement, kinetic friction will eventually bring an object to a stop. An example is a rock that's sliding across ice.
| 9 | |
| 11 | |
| 8.1 | |
| 4 |
The mechanical advantage (MA) of a wedge is its length divided by its thickness:
MA = \( \frac{l}{t} \) = \( \frac{27 in.}{3 in.} \) = 9
Which of these is the formula for kinetic energy?
\(KE = {1 \over 2}mh^2\) |
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\(KE = mgh\) |
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\(KE = {1 \over 2}mv^2\) |
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\(KE = {m \over v^2 }\) |
Kinetic energy is the energy of movement and is a function of the mass of an object and its speed: \(KE = {1 \over 2}mv^2\) where m is mass in kilograms, v is speed in meters per second, and KE is in joules. The most impactful quantity to kinetic energy is velocity as an increase in mass increases KE linearly while an increase in speed increases KE exponentially.
The measure of how much of the power put into a machine is turned into movement or force is called:
force multiplication |
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mechanical advantage |
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power |
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efficiency |
The efficiency of a machine describes how much of the power put into the machine is turned into movement or force. A 100% efficient machine would turn all of the input power into output movement or force. However, no machine is 100% efficient due to friction, heat, wear and other imperfections that consume input power without delivering any output.
A truck is using a rope to pull a car. Tension in the rope is greatest in which of the following places?
tension is equal in all parts of the rope |
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in the middle |
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near the car |
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near the truck |
Tension is a force that stretches or elongates something. When a cable or rope is used to pull an object, for example, it stretches internally as it accepts the weight that it's moving. Although tension is often treated as applying equally to all parts of a material, it's greater at the places where the material is under the most stress.