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Activity 77: Mass and Collisions
Activity 77: Mass and Collisions

... • The tortoise and the hare in a road race to defend the honor of their breed. The tortoise crawls the entire 1000 m distance at a speed of 0.2 m/s while the rabbit runs the first 200 m at 2.0 m/s. The rabbit then stops to take a nap for 1.3 hours and wakes to finish the last 800 m with an average s ...
Lesson 44: Acceleration, Velocity, and Period in SHM
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... runs at the right speed. Be careful when you are using this formula. Remember three things: 1. The period is the time it takes to complete one full swing… that means if you let go of the bob (the weight on the end), it will swing away from your hand and back to your hand. That’s one ...
Shaken Beliefs: Seismic Lessons from Japan’s Tohoku Earthquake
Shaken Beliefs: Seismic Lessons from Japan’s Tohoku Earthquake

... its propagation and eventual size will http://www.newyorker.com/tech/elements/shaken-... depend on a cascade of effects that play out over seconds or minutes. Earlier this month, a group of four scientists published a paper in Nature (http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v531/n7592 /full/nature16945 ...
Circular Motion Notes
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... Period of a pendulum: The time for a pendulum to make one complete oscillation. T = 2(L/g) Where: T = Period of a pendulum (s) L = Length of a Pendulum (m) g –acceleration due to gravity (m/s2) ...
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... If the net force is zero, an object at rest will stay at rest. If an object is acted upon by unbalanced forces, its motion will change. ...
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Newton`s Laws of Motion

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地震 香港 - Hong Kong Observatory

... Tectonic plates move relative to one another. At the boundary between two plates, frictional force acts against relative movement and energy builds up. An earthquake usually occurs when the rock deep underground ruptures, releasing the energy accumulated over time. The seismic waves generated by the ...
Ц(Ш) Ш = .ЦЦ + Ц . Ъ(Ш) Ш
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... • Preseismic Uplift- Raising of earths crust for a period of time before the earthquake • Seismic Gaps- Areas along active fault zones which are capable of producing large quakes but have not in recent time. Believed to store tectonic strain, thus having good potential for future quake sites. ...
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Newton`s Three Laws of Motion

... Balanced and Unbalanced Forces • The motion of all objects depends on the total of all forces acting on the object. • We call the total of all forces the net force. • Reminder – add forces acting in same ...
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Seismometer

Seismometers are instruments that measure motion of the ground, including those of seismic waves generated by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and other seismic sources. Records of seismic waves allow seismologists to map the interior of the Earth, and locate and measure the size of these different sources.The word derives from the Greek σεισμός, seismós, a shaking or quake, from the verb σείω, seíō, to shake; and μέτρον, métron, measure and was coined by David Milne-Home in 1841, to describe an instrument designed by Scottish physicist James David Forbes.Seismograph is another Greek term from seismós and γράφω, gráphō, to draw. It is often used to mean seismometer, though it is more applicable to the older instruments in which the measuring and recording of ground motion were combined than to modern systems, in which these functions are separated.Both types provide a continuous record of ground motion; this distinguishes them from seismoscopes, which merely indicate that motion has occurred, perhaps with some simple measure of how large it was.The concerning technical discipline is called seismometry, a branch of seismology.
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