For the question that asks the distance between the rod, if the mass they gives you decreases with the increase in current doesn't that mean the distance is changing as a result of the second rod being atracted to the first?
Stand on the scales at your house, now push down on a table next to you with your hand, the reading can go down without you lifting off the scales. Sheesh, you do physics?dimivat said:it must change becuase there is a force between them to attract one another only small amounts but it does change. Y else would the weight change?
i copied the formula I1I2 formula from the formula sheet and wrote down what i knew, so i should get one mark shouldnt i?markus123456789 said:Im pretty sure that there was a simpler way to do it. From what i remember i let
Fw=mg = F/l= KI1I2/D
From there the equation could be rearranged to give D as the subject.
D = KI1I2L / mg
I cant remember exactly how it went but from there looking at the table that was given ,take a value for mg (weight force) and the corresponding I2 . From what I remember it had an answer in the …X10-3 Meh Im not sure if I did it right, but oh well. Physics is over
thats complete bullshit. the gradient is absolutely relevant; thats why they got u to draw the graph.yankyfly said:the gradient was irrelevent. You just picked one point on your line of best fit, and examined the current that was flowing and the change of mass that had occured between when that current was flowing and when it was not. You times'd that mass change by 9.8 to get the force that was happening when that current was flowing. then you subeed your values into the equation.
Depending on your line of best fit. The distance apart should have been between 2-3 cm