| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 2.53 |
| Score | 0% | 51% |
Specific gravity is a comparison of the density of an object with the density of:
oil |
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carbon |
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water |
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air |
Specific gravity is the ratio of the density of equal volumes of a substance and water and is measured by a hyrdometer.
Depending on where you apply effort and resistance, the wheel and axle can multiply:
speed or power |
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power or distance |
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force or distance |
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force or speed |
If you apply the resistance to the axle and the effort to the wheel, the wheel and axle will multiply force and if you apply the resistance to the wheel and the effort to the axle, it will multiply speed.
What type of load acts on a relatively small area of a structure?
impact load |
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concentrated load |
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dynamic load |
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non-uniformly distributed load |
A concentrated load acts on a relatively small area of a structure, a static uniformly distributed load doesn't create specific stress points or vary with time, a dynamic load varies with time or affects a structure that experiences a high degree of movement, an impact load is sudden and for a relatively short duration and a non-uniformly distributed load creates different stresses at different locations on a structure.
Force of friction due to kinetic friction is __________ the force of friction due to static friction.
higher than |
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lower than |
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opposite |
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the same as |
The formula for force of friction (Ff) is the same whether kinetic or static friction applies: Ff = μFN. To distinguish between kinetic and static friction, μk and μs are often used in place of μ.
The advantage of using a third-class lever is that it increases:
the speed of the load |
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the distance traveled by the load |
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the mechanical advantage of the lever |
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the force applied to the load |
A third-class lever is used to increase distance traveled by an object in the same direction as the force applied. The fulcrum is at one end of the lever, the object at the other, and the force is applied between them. This lever does not impart a mechanical advantage as the effort force must be greater than the load but does impart extra speed to the load. Examples of third-class levers are shovels and tweezers.