1 / 22

Ch 10 test study helper

Ch 10 test study helper. 40. 40 key. Chapter Test (page 39) I. Testing Concepts 1–10. Answers will vary. Sample answers are given. 1. Speed is how fast you change position. (1/1) 2. Average speed is the total distance covered divided by the total time it takes. (1/1)

irving
Download Presentation

Ch 10 test study helper

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ch 10 test study helper

  2. 40

  3. 40 key • Chapter Test (page 39) • I. Testing Concepts • 1–10. Answers will vary. Sample answers are given. • 1. Speed is how fast you change position. (1/1) • 2. Average speed is the total distance covered • divided by the total time it takes. (1/1) • 3. Velocity is speed plus a direction. (1/1) • 4. Acceleration is how fast your motion is • changing. (3/2) • 5. When you slow down, you experience a negative • acceleration. (4/2)

  4. 40 key cont • 6. Mass is the amount of matter in an object. (5/3) • 7. Inertia is a measure of how much an object • resists a change in its motion. (5/3) • 8. Momentum is an object’s mass times its velocity. • (6/3) • 9. Displacement is how far and in what direction an • object has moved form its starting point. (1/1) • 10. The law of conservation states that when two • objects collide, the total momentum before the • collision is the same as the total momentum • after the collision. (7/3)

  5. 41

  6. 41 key • II. Understanding Concepts • 1. e (1/1) • 2. d (1/1) • 3. b (3/2) • 4. a (6/3) • 5. c (5/3) • 6. AB (2/1) • 7. BC (2/1) • 8. D (2/1) • 9. v = d/t = 3km/20 min = 9 km/h (2/1) • 10. displacement (1/1) • 11. 5 m/s (6/3) • 12. mass (5/3) • 13. mass and velocity (6/3) • 14. are accelerating (3/2)

  7. 42

  8. 42 key • III. Applying Concepts • 1. A, B, C, E (2/1) • 2. B (2/1) • 3. D (2/1) • 4. F (2/1) • 5. The car is slowing down 5 m/s for every second it • travels. (2/1) • 6. No, it might be changing direction. (4/2)

  9. 43

  10. 43 k • 7. a. 10 km + 5 km + 15 km + 5 km = 35 km (1/1) • b. 5 km east (1/1) • 8. a = (vf–vj)/t = (23 m/s – 30 ms)/3 s = –2.3 m/s2 (4/2) • 9. 5 kg (20 m/s ) + 10 kg (5 m/s) = 15 v; v = 10 m/s (7/3)

  11. 43 k • 1. Your distance would most nearly equal your displacement because you would come closer to moving in a straight line. Your friend would probably go around many curves, so her distance would be a great deal more than her displacement. (1/1) • 2. No, you would also need to know the direction in which the storm is moving. You need to know its velocity, not just it speed. (1/1) • 3. Inertia is a measure of an object’s resistance to a change in its motion. It is determined by the mass on an object. Momentum is a measure of how hard it is to stop an object. It is calculated by multiplying the mass of the object by its velocity. An object always has inertia. An object has • momentum only when it is moving. (5/3) • 4. If they have the same velocity, the bowling ball would be much harder to stop because it has greater mass. (7/3) • 5. The slow velocity of the massive rocket ship is equal to the rapid velocity of the less massive exhaust gases that are expelled in the opposite direction from the rocket engine. (7/3)

  12. Book 303-307

  13. Book pages-303-307

  14. 303-307

  15. 303-307

  16. 303-307

  17. 303-307

  18. 303-307

  19. 303-307

  20. 303-307

  21. 303-307

  22. 303-307

More Related