2.99 See Answer

Question: The apparatus shown in Figure P11.12

The apparatus shown in Figure P11.12 was used by Joule to measure the mechanical equivalent of heat. Work is done on the water by a rotating paddle wheel, which is driven by two blocks falling at a constant speed. The temperature of the stirred water increases due to the friction between the water and the paddles. If the energy lost in the bearings and through the walls is neglected, then the loss in potential energy associated with the blocks equals the work done by the paddle wheel on the water. If each block has a mass of 1.50 kg and the insulated tank is filled with 0.200 kg of water, what is the increase in temperature of the water after the blocks fall through a distance of 3.00 m? Figure P11.12:
The apparatus shown in Figure P11.12 was used by Joule to measure the mechanical equivalent of heat. Work is done on the water by a rotating paddle wheel, which is driven by two blocks falling at a constant speed. The temperature of the stirred water increases due to the friction between the water and the paddles. If the energy lost in the bearings and through the walls is neglected, then the loss in potential energy associated with the blocks equals the work done by the paddle wheel on the water. If each block has a mass of 1.50 kg and the insulated tank is filled with 0.200 kg of water, what is the increase in temperature of the water after the blocks fall through a distance of 3.00 m?

Figure P11.12:


> Consider the combination of capacitors in Figure P16.42. (a) Find the equivalent single capacitance of the two capacitors in series and redraw the diagram (called diagram 1) with this equivalent capacitance. (b) In diagram 1, find the equivalent capacita

> For the system of capacitors shown in Figure P16.41, find (a) The equivalent capacitance of the system, (b) The charge on each capacitor, and (c) The potential difference across each capacitor. Figure P16.41:

> Two capacitors give an equivalent capacitance of 9.00 pF when connected in parallel and an equivalent capacitance of 2.00 pF when connected in series. What is the capacitance of each capacitor?

> Cathode ray tubes (CRTs) used in old-style televisions have been replaced by modern LCD and LED screens. Part of the CRT included a set of accelerating plates separated by a distance of about 1.50 cm. If the potential difference across the plates was 25.

> Find (a) The equivalent capacitance of the capacitors in Figure P16.39, (b) The charge on each capacitor, and (c) The potential difference across each capacitor. Figure P16.39:

> In the summer of 1958 in St. Petersburg, Florida, a new sidewalk was poured near the childhood home of one of the authors. No expansion joints were supplied, and by mid- July, the sidewalk had been completely destroyed by thermal expansion and had to be

> Two capacitors, C1 = 5.00 μF and C2 = 12.0 μF, are connected in parallel, and the resulting combination is connected to a 9.00-V battery. Find (a) The equivalent capacitance of the combination, (b) The potential difference across each capacitor, and (c)

> Given a 2.50-μF capacitor, a 6.25-μF capacitor, and a 6.00-V battery, find the charge on each capacitor if you connect them (a) In series across the battery and (b) In parallel across the battery.

> A small object with a mass of 350. μg carries a charge of 30.0 nC and is suspended by a thread between the vertical plates of a parallel-plate capacitor. The plates are separated by 4.00 cm. If the thread makes an angle of 15.08 with the vertical, what i

> A parallel-plate capacitor with area 0.200 m2 and plate separation of 3.00 mm is connected to a 6.00-V battery. (a) What is the capacitance? (b) How much charge is stored on the plates? (c) What is the electric field between the plates? (d) Find the magn

> A 1-megabit computer memory chip contains many 60.0 x 10-15-F capacitors. Each capacitor has a plate area of 21.0 x 10-12 m2. Determine the plate separation of such a capacitor. (Assume a parallel-plate configuration.) The diameter of an atom is on the o

> An air-filled capacitor consists of two parallel plates, each with an area of 7.60 cm2 and separated by a distance of 1.80 mm. If a 20.0-V potential difference is applied to these plates, calculate (a) The electric field between the plates, (b) The capac

> Air breaks down and conducts charge as a spark if the electric field magnitude exceeds 3.00 x 106 V/m. (a) Determine the maximum charge Qmax that can be stored on an air-filled parallel-plate capacitor with a plate area of 2.00 x 10-4 m2. (b) A 75.0 μF a

> An air-filled parallel-plate capacitor has plates of area 2.30 cm2 separated by 1.50 mm. The capacitor is connected to a 12.0-V battery. (a) Find the value of its capacitance. (b) What is the charge on the capacitor? (c) What is the magnitude of the unif

> (a) When a 9.00-V battery is connected to the plates of a capacitor, it stores a charge of 27.0 μC. What is the value of the capacitance? (b) If the same capacitor is connected to a 12.0-V battery, what charge is stored?

> A potential difference of 90.0 mV exists between the inner and outer surfaces of a cell membrane. The inner surface is negative relative to the outer surface. How much work is required to eject a positive sodium ion (Na+) from the interior of the cell?

> A swimming pool filled with water has dimensions of 5.00 m x 10.0 m x 1.78 m. (a) Find the mass of water in the pool. (b) Find the thermal energy required to heat the pool water from 15.5°C to 26.5°C. (c) Calculate the cost of heating the pool from 15.5°

> Consider the Earth and a cloud layer 8.0 x 102 m above the planet to be the plates of a parallel-plate capacitor. (a) If the cloud layer has an area of 1.0 km2 = 1.0 x 106 m2, what is the capacitance? (b) If an electric field strength greater than 3.0 x

> In the classical model of a hydrogen atom, an electron orbits a proton with a kinetic energy of +13.6 eV and an electric potential energy of -27.2 eV. (a) Use the kinetic energy to calculate the classical orbital speed. (b) Use the electric potential ene

> An alpha particle, which has charge 3.20 x 10-19 C, is moved from point A, where the electric potential is 3.60 x 103 J/C, to point B, where the electric potential is 5.80 x 103 J/C. Calculate the work done by the electric field on the alpha particle in

> An electric field does 1.50 x 103 eV of work on a carbon nucleus of charge 9.61 x 10-19 C. Find the change in the nucleus’ (a) Electric potential and (b) Electric potential energy in joules.

> Calculate the speed of (a) An electron and (b) A proton with a kinetic energy of 1.00 electron volt (eV). (c) Calculate the average translational kinetic energy in eV of a 3.00 x 102-K ideal gas particle.

> Four point charges each having charge Q are located at the corners of a square having sides of length a. Find symbolic expressions for (a) The total electric potential at the center of the square due to the four charges and (b) The work required to bring

> In Rutherford’s famous scattering experiments that led to the planetary model of the atom, alpha particles (having charges of +2e and masses of 6.64 x 10-27 kg) were fired toward a gold nucleus with charge +79e. An alpha particle, initi

> The metal sphere of a small Van de Graaff generator illustrated in Figure 15.23 has a radius of 18 cm. When the electric field at the surface of the sphere reaches 3.0 x 106 V/m, the air breaks down, and the generator discharges. What is the maximum pote

> A tiny sphere of mass 8.00 μg and charge -2.80 nC is initially at a distance of 1.60 μm from a fixed charge of +8.50 nC. If the 8.00 - mg sphere is released from rest, find (a) Its kinetic energy when it is 0.500 μm from the fixed charge and (b) Its spee

> A proton and an alpha particle (charge = 2e, mass = 6.64 x 10-27 kg) are initially at rest, separated by 4.00 x 10-15 m. (a) If they are both released simultaneously, explain why you can’t find their velocities at infinity using only conservation of ener

> A 1.5-kg copper block is given an initial speed of 3.0 m/s on a rough horizontal surface. Because of friction, the block finally comes to rest. (a) If the block absorbs 85% of its initial kinetic energy as internal energy, calculate its increase in tempe

> A proton is released from rest in a uniform electric field of magnitude 385 N/C. Find (a) The electric force on the proton, (b) The acceleration of the proton, and (c) The distance it travels in 2.00 μs.

> A proton is located at the origin, and a second proton is located on the x - axis at x = 6.00 fm (1 fm = 10-15 m). (a) Calculate the electric potential energy associated with this configuration. (b) An alpha particle (charge = 2e, mass = 6.64 x 10-27 kg)

> A positive point charge q = +2.50 nC is located at x = 1.20 m and a negative charge of -2q = -5.00 nC is located at the origin as in Figure P16.18. (a) Sketch the electric potential versus x for points along the x - axis in the range -1.50 m (b) Find a s

> The three charges in Figure P16.17 are at the vertices of an isosceles triangle. Let q = 7.00 nC and calculate the electric potential at the midpoint of the base. Figure P16.17:

> Three identical point charges each of charge q are located at the vertices of an equilateral triangle as in Figure P16.16. The distance from the center of the triangle to each vertex is a. (a) Show that the electric field at the center of the triangle is

> Two point charges Q1 = +5.00 nC and Q2 = -3.00 nC are separated by 35.0 cm. (a) What is the electric potential at a point midway between the charges? (b) What is the potential energy of the pair of charges? What is the significance of the algebraic sign

> Three charges are situated at corners of a rectangle as in Figure P16.13. How much work must an external agent do to move the 8.00-μC charge to infinity? Figure P16.13:

> (a) Find the electric potential, taking zero at infinity, at the upper right corner (the corner without a charge) of the rectangle in Figure P16.13. (b) Repeat if the 2.00-μC charge is replaced with a charge of -2.00 μC. Figu

> The two charges in Figure P16.12 are separated by d = 2.00 cm. Find the electric potential at (a) point A and (b) point B, which is halfway between the charges. Figure P16.12:

> An electron is at the origin. (a) Calculate the electric potential VA at point A, x = 0.250 cm. (b) Calculate the electric potential VB at point B, x = 0.750 cm. What is the potential difference VB - VA? (c) Would a negatively charged particle placed at

> A 0.200-kg aluminum cup contains 800. g of water in thermal equilibrium with the cup at 80.°C. The combination of cup and water is cooled uniformly so that the temperature decreases by 1.5°C per minute. At what rate is energy being removed? Express your

> On planet Tehar, the free-fall acceleration is the same as that on the Earth, but there is also a strong downward electric field that is uniform close to the planet’s surface. A 2.00-kg ball having a charge of 5.00 μC is thrown upward at a speed of 20.1

> A uniform electric field of magnitude 375 N/C pointing in the positive x - direction acts on an electron, which is initially at rest. After the electron has moved 3.20 cm, what is (a) The work done by the field on the electron, (b) The change in potentia

> Two small identical conducting spheres are placed with their centers 0.30 m apart. One is given a charge of 12 x 10-9 C, the other a charge of -18 x 10-9 C. (a) Find the electrostatic force exerted on one sphere by the other. (b) The spheres are connecte

> Four point charges are at the corners of a square of side a as shown in Figure P15.8. Determine the magnitude and direction of the resultant electric force on q, with ke, q, and a left in symbolic form. Figure P15.8:

> Protons are projected with an initial speed v0 = 9550 m/s into a region where a uniform electric field of magnitude E = 720 N/C is present (Fig. P15.70). The protons are to hit a target that lies a horizontal distance of 1.27 mm from the point where the

> Two uncharged spheres are separated by 2.00 m. If 3.50 x 1012 electrons are removed from one sphere and placed on the other, determine the magnitude of the Coulomb force on one of the spheres, treating the spheres as point charges.

> Each of the electrons in a particle beam has a kinetic energy of 1.60 x 10-17 J. (a) What is the magnitude of the uniform electric field (pointing in the direction of the electrons’ movement) that will stop these electrons in a distance of 10.0 cm? (b) H

> Three identical point charges, each of mass m = 0.100 kg, hang from three strings, as shown in Figure P15.68. If the lengths of the left and right strings are each L = 30.0 cm and if the angle θ is 45.0°, determine the value of q.

> A solid conducting sphere of radius 2.00 cm has a charge of 8.00 μC. A conducting spherical shell of inner radius 4.00 cm and outer radius 5.00 cm is concentric with the solid sphere and has a charge of -4.00 μC. Find the electric field at (a) r = 1.00 c

> Two small beads having positive charges q1 = 3q and q2 = q are fixed at the opposite ends of a horizontal insulating rod of length d = 1.50 m. The bead with charge q1 is at the origin. As shown in Figure P15.66, a third small charged bead is free to slid

> Rank the potential energies of the four systems of particles shown in Figure CQ16.4 from largest to smallest. Include equalities if appropriate. Figure CQ16.4:

> Two hard rubber spheres, each of mass m = 15.0 g, are rubbed with fur on a dry day and are then suspended with two insulating strings of length L = 5.00 cm whose support points are a distance d = 3.00 cm from each other as shown in Figure P15.65. During

> A point charge of magnitude 5.00 μC is at the origin of a coordinate system, and a charge of -4.00 μC is at the point x = 1.00 m. There is a point on the x - axis, at x less than infinity, where the electric field goes to zero. (a) Show by conceptual arg

> Two 2.0- g spheres are suspended by 10.0 - cm - long light strings (Fig. P15.63). A uniform electric field is applied in the x - direction. If the spheres have charges of -5.0 x 10-8 C and +5.0 x 10-8 C, determine the electric field intensity that enable

> A 1.00 - g cork ball having a positive charge of 2.00 mC is suspended vertically on a 0.500 - m - long light string in the presence of a uniform downward - directed electric field of magnitude E = 1.00 x 105 N/C as in Figure P15.62. If the ball is displa

> A point charge +2Q is at the origin and a point charge -Q is located along the x - axis at x = d as in Figure P15.61. Find symbolic expressions for the components of the net force on a third point charge +Q located along the y - axis at y = d. Figure P1

> The electrons in a particle beam each have a kinetic energy K. Find the magnitude of the electric field that will stop these electrons in a distance d, expressing the answer symbolically in terms of K, e, and d. Should the electric field point in the dir

> A molecule of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is 2.17 mm long. The ends of the molecule become singly ionized: negative on one end, positive on the other. The helical molecule acts like a spring and compresses 1.00% upon becoming charged. Determine the effec

> A proton moving at v0 = 1.50 x 106 m/s enters the region between two parallel plates with charge densities of magnitude σ = 4.20 x 10-9 C/m2 (Fig. P15.59). Calculate (a) The magnitude of the electric field between the plates, and (b) The magni

> A small plastic ball of mass m = 2.00 g is suspended by a string of length L = 20.0 cm in a uniform electric field, as shown in Figure P15.58. If the ball is in equilibrium when the string makes a θ = 15.0° angle with the vertical

> Three point charges are aligned along the x - axis as shown in Figure P15.57. Find the electric field at the position x = 12.0 m, y = 0. Figure P15.57:

> A 5.00-g lead bullet traveling at 3.00 x 102 m/s is stopped by a large tree. If half the kinetic energy of the bullet is transformed into internal energy and remains with the bullet while the other half is transmitted to the tree, what is the increase in

> A non-conducting, thin plane sheet of charge carries a uniform charge per unit area of 5.20 μC/m2 as in Figure 15.30. (a) Find the electric field at a distance of 8.70 cm from the plate. (b) Explain whether your result changes as the distan

> In deep space, two spheres each of radius 5.00 m are connected by a 3.00 x 102 m non-conducting cord. If a uniformly distributed charge of 35.0 mC resides on the surface of each sphere, calculate the tension in the cord.

> A very large non-conducting plate lying in the xy - plane carries a charge per unit area of σ. A second such plate located at z = 2.00 cm and oriented parallel to the xy - plane carries a charge per unit area of -2σ. Find the electric field (a) For z < 0

> Suppose the conducting spherical shell of Figure 15.29 carries a charge of 3.00 nC and that a charge of -2.00 nC is at the center of the sphere. If a = 2.00 m and b = 2.40 m, find the electric field at (a) r = 1.50 m, (b) r = 2.20 m, and (c) r = 2.50 m.

> A charge of 1.70 x 102 μC is at the center of a cube of edge 80.0 cm. No other charges are nearby. (a) Find the flux through the whole surface of the cube. (b) Find the flux through each face of the cube. (c) Would your answers to parts (a) or (b) change

> A point charge q is located at the center of a spherical shell of radius a that has a charge -q uniformly distributed on its surface. Find the electric field (a) For all points outside the spherical shell and (b) For a point inside the shell a distance r

> A charge of q = 2.00 x 10-9 C is spread evenly on a thin metal disk of radius 0.200 m. (a) Calculate the charge density on the disk. (b) Find the magnitude of the electric field just above the center of the disk, neglecting edge effects and assuming a un

> The nucleus of 8Be, which consists of 4 protons and 4 neutrons, is very unstable and spontaneously breaks into two alpha particles (helium nuclei, each consisting of 2 protons and 2 neutrons). (a) What is the force between the two alpha particles when th

> A charge q = +5.80 &Icirc;&frac14;C is located at the center of a regular tetrahedron (a four - sided surface) as in Figure P15.48. Find (a) The total electric flux through the tetrahedron and (b) The electric flux through one face of the tetrahedron. F

> A 3.00-g copper coin at 25.0°C drops 50.0 m to the ground. (a) Assuming 60.0% of the change in gravitational potential energy of the coin–Earth system goes into increasing the internal energy of the coin, determine the coin’s final temperature. (b) Does

> Four closed surfaces, S1 through S4, together with the charges -2Q , Q , and -Q , are sketched in Figure P15.47. (The colored lines are the intersections of the surfaces with the page.) Find the electric flux through each surface. Figure P15.47:

> The electric field everywhere on the surface of a charged sphere of radius 0.230 m has a magnitude of 575 N/C and points radially outward from the center of the sphere. (a) What is the net charge on the sphere? (b) What can you conclude about the nature

> An electric field of intensity 3.50 kN/C is applied along the x - axis. Calculate the electric flux through a rectangular plane 0.350 m wide and 0.700 m long if (a) The plane is parallel to the yz - plane, (b) The plane is parallel to the xy - plane, and

> A uniform electric field of magnitude E = 435 N/C makes an angle of &Icirc;&cedil; = 65.0&Acirc;&deg; with a plane surface of area A = 3.50 m2 as in Figure P15.44. Find the electric flux through this surface. Figure P15.44:

> A Van de Graaff generator is charged so that a proton at its surface accelerates radially outward at 1.52 x 1012 m/s2. Find (a) The magnitude of the electric force on the proton at that instant and (b) The magnitude and direction of the electric field at

> In the Millikan oil - drop experiment illustrated in Figure 15.21, an atomizer (a sprayer with a fine nozzle) is used to introduce many tiny droplets of oil between two oppositely charged parallel metal plates. Some of the droplets pick up one or more ex

> If the electric field strength in air exceeds 3.0 x 106 N/C, the air becomes a conductor. Using this fact, determine the maximum amount of charge that can be carried by a metal sphere 2.0 m in radius.

> The dome of a Van de Graaff generator receives a charge of 2.0 X 10-4 C. Find the strength of the electric field (a) Inside the dome, (b) At the surface of the dome, assuming it has a radius of 1.0 m, and (c) 4.0 m from the center of the dome.

> A small sphere of mass m = 7.50 g and charge q1 = 32.0 nC is attached to the end of a string and hangs vertically as in Figure P15.4. A second charge of equal mass and charge q2 = -58.0 nC is located below the first charge a distance d = 2.00 cm below th

> Refer to Figure 15.20. The charge lowered into the center of the hollow conductor has a magnitude of 5 μC. Find the magnitude and sign of the charge on the inside and outside of the hollow conductor when the charge is as shown in (a) Figure 15.20a, (b) F

> Convert 3.50 x 103 cal to the equivalent number of (a) Kilocalories (also known as Calories, used to describe the energy content of food) and (b) Joules.

> Three equal positive charges are at the corners of an equilateral triangle of side a as in Figure P15.38. Assume the three charges together create an electric field. (a) Sketch the electric field lines in the plane of the charges. (b) Find the location o

> Two point charges are a small distance apart. (a) Sketch the electric field lines for the two if one has a charge four times that of the other and both charges are positive. (b) Repeat for the case in which both charges are negative.

> (a) Sketch the electric field pattern around two positive point charges of magnitude 1 μC placed close together. (b) Sketch the electric field pattern around two negative point charges of -2 μC, placed close together. (c) Sketch the pattern around two po

> (a) Sketch the electric field lines around an isolated point charge q > 0. (b) Sketch the electric field pattern around an isolated negative point charge of magnitude -2q.

> Figure P15.34 shows the electric field lines for two point charges separated by a small distance. (a) Determine the ratio q1/q2. (b) What are the signs of q1 and q2? Figure P15.34:

> Three identical charges (q = -5.0 &Icirc;&frac14;C) lie along a circle of radius 2.0 m at angles of 30&Acirc;&deg;, 150&Acirc;&deg;, and 270&Acirc;&deg;, as shown in Figure P15.33. What is the resultant electric field at the center of the circle? Figure

> Three charges are at the corners of an equilateral triangle, as shown in Figure P15.32. Calculate the electric field at a point midway between the two charges on the x - axis. Figure P15.3:

> In Figure P15.31, determine the point (other than infinity) at which the total electric field is zero. Figure P15.31:

> Three point charges are located on a circular arc as shown in Figure P15.30. (a) What is the total electric field at P, the center of the arc? (b) Find the electric force that would be exerted on a -5.00 - nC charge placed at P. Figure P15.30:

> Rocket observations show that dust particles in Earth’s upper atmosphere are often electrically charged. (a) Find the distance separating two dust particles if each has a charge of +e and the Coulomb force between them has magnitude 1.00 x 10-14 N. (b) C

> An aluminum rod and an iron rod are joined end to end in good thermal contact. The two rods have equal lengths and radii. The free end of the aluminum rod is maintained at a temperature of 100.°C, and the free end of the iron rod is maintained at 0°C. (a

> Two equal positive charges are at opposite corners of a trapezoid as in Figure P15.29. Find symbolic expressions for the components of the electric field at the point P. Figure P15.29:

> A particle of mass 1.00 x 10-9 kg and charge 3.00 pC is moving in a vacuum chamber where the electric field has magnitude 2.00 x 103 N/C and is directed straight upward. Neglecting other forces except gravity, calculate the particle’s (a) Acceleration an

> A charged dust particle at rest in a vacuum is held motionless by an upward - directed 475-N/C electric field. If the dust particle has a mass of 7.50 x 10-10 kg, find (a) The charge on the dust particle and (b) The number of electrons that must be added

> A helium nucleus of mass m = 6.64 x 10-27 kg and charge q = 6.41 x 10-19 C is in a constant electric field of magnitude E = 2.00 x 10-3 N/C pointing in the positive x - direction. Neglecting other forces, calculate (a) The nucleus’ acceleration and (b) I

> Four point charges are located at the corners of a square. Each charge has magnitude 3.20 nC and the square has sides of length 2.00 cm. Find the magnitude of the electric field at the center of the square if (a) All of the charges are positive and (b) T

> (a) Find the magnitude and direction of the electric field at the position of the 2.00 &Icirc;&frac14;C charge in Figure P15.13. (b) How would the electric field at that point be affected if the charge there were doubled? Would the magnitude of the elect

> A proton accelerates from rest in a uniform electric field of 640. N/C. At some later time, its speed is 1.20 x 106 m/s. (a) Find the magnitude of the acceleration of the proton. (b) How long does it take the proton to reach this speed? (c) How far has i

2.99

See Answer