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Prepare for your physics final exam with this review covering topics like work, power, energy, and more. Test your understanding with practice questions and explanations.
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In physics, work is defined as ______ • force times time • force divided by distance • distance divided by time • force divided by time • force times distance force time distance
If you lift two loads up one story, how much work do you do compared to lifting just one load up one story? • one quarter as much • one half as much • the same amount • twice as much • four times as much twice as much
If you lift one load up two stories, how much work do you do compared to lifting one load up only one story? • one quarter as much • one half as much • the same amount • twice as much • four times as much twice as much
If Nellie Newton pushes an object with twice the force for twice the distance, she does • twice the work • the same work • four times the work • eight times the work four times the work
The unit of work is the • watt • meter • joule • newton • second joule
Power is defined as • force on an object divided by the time the force acts • work done time the time take to do that work • work done on an object divided by the time take to do the work • distance divided by the time take to move that distance • force on an object times the distance the object moves work done on an object divided by the time take to do the work
The unit of power is the • newton • meter • joule • second • watt watt
Potential energy is the energy an object has because of its • density • size • location • temperature • speed location
The amount of potential energy possessed by an elevated object is equal to • the power used to lift it • the distance it is lifted • the force needed to lift it • the work done to lift it • the value of the acceleration due to gravity the work done to lift it
Kinetic energy of an object is equal to • its mass multiplied by its acceleration squared • one half the product of its mass times its speed squared • its mass multiplied by its speed • one half the produce of its mass times its speed • its mass multiplied by acceleration one half the product of its mass times its speed squared
How much farther will a car traveling at 100 km/h skid than the same car traveling at 50 km/h? • Half as far • the same distance • twice as far • four times as far • five times as far four times as far
An arrow in a bow has 70 J of potential energy. Assuming no loss of energy to heat, how much kinetic energy will it have after it has been shot? • 0 J • 35 J • 50 J • 70 J • 140 J 70 J
Energy is changed from one form to another with no net loss or gain. • sometimes true • always false • always true always true
As a pendulum swings back and forth • at the endpoints of its swing, its energy is all potential • at the lowest part of its swing, its energy is all kinetic • kinetic energy is transformed into potential energy • potential energy is transformed into kinetic energy • all of the above all of the above
When a car’s speed triples, its kinetic energy • remains the same • triples • increases by 4 times • increases by 9 times • none of the above increases by 9 times
A woman can lift barrels a vertical distance of 1 meter or can roll them up a 2-meter long ramp to the same elevation. If she uses the ramp, the applied force required is • ¼ as much • ½ as much • the same amount • twice as much • four times as much ½ as much
A job is done slowly, and an identical job is done quickly. Both jobs require the same amount of work but different amounts of • energy • power • both a and b • none of the above power
Which requires more work: lifting a 70-kg sack vertically 2 meters or lifting a 35-kg sack vertically 4 meters? • lifting the 70 kg sack • lifting the 35 kg sack • both require the same amount of work both require the same amount of work
A ball is thrown into the air with 100 J of kinetic energy, which is transformed to gravitational potential energy at the top of its trajectory. When it returns to its original level after encountering air resistance, its kinetic energy is • 100 J • more than 100 J • less than 100 J • not enough information given less than 100 J
An object that has kinetic energy must be • at rest • falling • moving • elevated moving
An object that has kinetic energy must have • acceleration • a force applied to maintain it • momentum • none of the above momentum
Which has greater kinetic energy, a car traveling at 30 km/h or a half-as-massive car traveling at 60 km/h? • the 60 km/h car • the 30 km/h car • both have the same kinetic energy the 60 km/h car
An object at rest may have • energy • speed • velocity • momentum • acceleration • none of the above energy
If an object has kinetic energy, then it also must have • impulse • force • momentum • acceleration • none of the above momentum
If the velocity of a moving object doubles, then what else doubles? • acceleration • kinetic energy • momentum • all of the above • none of the above momentum
All simple machines ideally work on the principle that • impulse equals momentum change • force equals mass times acceleration • total momentum before a collision equals total momentum after the collision • work input equals work output • kinetic energy transforms into potential energy work input equals work output
The ratio of output force to input force of a simple machine is called the • fulcrum • efficiency • pivot point • lever arm • mechanical advantage mechanical advantage
A pulley system can • change the direction of a force • multiply the force • increase the amount of work done • both a and b • both b and c both a and b
The ratio of useful work output to total work input is called the • mechanical advantage • lever arm • pivot point • fulcrum • efficiency efficiency
A small economy car (low mass) and a limousine (high mass) are pushed from rest across a parking lot, equal distances with equal forces. The car that receives more kinetic energy is the • the limo • the small car • neither one-they receive the same amount of KE neither one
How many joules of work are done on a box when a force of 25 N pushes it 3 m? • 1 J • 3 J • 8 J • 25 J • 75 J 75 J
How much power is required to do 40 J of work on an object in 5 seconds? • 0 W • 5 W • 8 W • 40 W • 200 W 8 W
How much work is done on a 60-N box of books that you carry horizontally across a 6-m room? • 0 J • 6 J • 10 J • 60 J • 360 J 0 J
How much work is done on a 20-N crate that you lift 2 m? • 0 J • 1 J • 2 J • 20 J • 40 J 40 J
How much power is expended if you lift a 60 N crate 10 meters in 1 second? • 0 W • 6 W • 10 W • 60W • 600 W 600 W
Suppose a moving car has 3000 J of kinetic energy. If the car's speed doubles, how much kinetic energy will it then have? • 1000 J • 1500 J • 3000 J • 6000 J • 12,000 J 12,000 J
It takes 80 J to push a large box 8 m across a floor. Assuming the push is in the same direction as the move, what is the magnitude of the force on the box? • 8 N • 10 N • 80 N • 640 N • none of the above 10 N
If Kelly the skater's speed increases so he has three times the momentum, then his kinetic energy increases by • 1/3 times • three times • nine times • none of the above. The KE remains the same. nine times
A 60-N object moves at 1 m/s. Its kinetic energy is • 1 J • 3 J • 60 J • more than 60 J 3 J
Sue can easily lift a 45.0-N rock with the help of a lever. When she pushes down with 20.0 N of force, she lifts the rock 0.3 meters. How far does she move her arms to do this? • 0.3 m • 0.7 m • 6.0 m • 2.3 m • 20.0 m 0.7 m
A pulley has two supporting strands. In order for it to lift a load 1 meter, the person pulling will have to pull a distance of • ¼ meter • ½ meter • 1 meter • 2 meters • 4 meters 2 meters
A frictionless inclined plane is 8.0 m long and rests on a wall that is 2.0 m high. How much force is needed to push a block of ice weighing 300.0 N up the plane? • 37.5 N • 75.0 N • 100.0 N • 300.0 N • 600.0 N 75.0 N
A machine puts out 100 watts of power for every 1000 watts put into it. The efficiency of the machine is • 10% • 50% • 90% • 110% 10%
Which has greater linear speed, a horse near the outside rail of a merry-go-round or a horse near the inside rail? • the inside horse • the outside horse • neither, they both have the same linear speed the outside horse
Which has greater angular speed, a horse near the outside rail of a merry-go-round or a horse near the inside rail? • the inside horse • the outside horse • neither, they both have the same angular speed neither, the have the same angular speed
Which of the following is NOT a unit of rotational speed? • meters/sec • revolutions/min • revolutions/sec • rotations/min • rotations/sec meters/sec
What is the direction of the force that acts on clothes in the spin cycle of a washing machine? • inward • down • outward • up inward
A tin can whirled on the end of a string moves in a circle because • the can continually pulls on the string • once the can starts moving, that is its natural tendency • there is a force on the can pulling it outward • there is an inward force on the can • all of the above there is an inward force on the can
If you whirl a tin can on the end of a string and the string suddenly breaks, the can will • fly directly away from you • fly off tangent to its circular path • fly directly toward you • spiral in toward your hand • spiral away from your hand fly off tangent to its circular path