but the magnet was already past half way and was only pulled out hence it was only attraction force I think. changes part threw me off. but if BOS expects both increasing an decreasing, then badly worded. "partly in"i think that you had to talk about both decreasing then increasing because it asked for changes
Yea, so mass decreases slightly when it is pulled off, then goes back to normal/previous as the solenoid "goes away" as there is no more influence.i think that you had to talk about both decreasing then increasing because it asked for changes
oh fucked. 2/4 for that then.Yea, so mass decreases slightly when it is pulled off, then goes back to normal/previous as the solenoid "goes away" as there is no more influence.
Its just attraction and then the absence of the solenoid.
You should get 2 marks of the 4 marks.I said at Tower A the mass would drop straight down to North Pole as Tower A was just rotating on the spot. For Tower B I Said as the initial velocity of the mass is equal to the velocity of the tower, the mass will fall with the rotational speed of the tower and land at its base. I cited Galileo's explanation as to why when you jump the earth doesn't move beneath you because you are in the same frame of reference.
Decreases as the magnet would have been attracted upwards to the solenoid as it left, Lenz Law would've produced mag fields opposing the change creating an attractive force to try and bring magnet closer. Sound any good?Depends on the marking scheme- its impossible to tell. One or two I'd imagine.
And I know this is sorta off topic but just quickly, what did you guys get for the solenoid and balance question? Did you put that the balance reading increases or decreases?
Wrong. It will have a tangential velocity of the tower as according to Newton's FIRST law of motion, the object will maintain that motion. The velocity is large enough that the Earth will curve away as quickly as the object falls.dude it was dropped, regardless of its position it will fall to the earth. It is at a height of a geostationary orbit, however it is NOT orbiting the earth because it has not reached its orbital velocity. yes its orbital period is 24 hours when it is on the tower, but when it is dropped it will not be. Newtons law of gravitation says that it will move to the earth as it does not have the orbital velocity required for it to orbit.
stop killing my hopewrong. It will have a tangential velocity of the tower as according to newton's first law of motion, the object will maintain that motion. The velocity is large enough that the earth will curve away as quickly as the object falls.
well i guess the head teacher of physics at my school is wrong ? or maybe multiple answers are accepted along with justification? or maybe the object is dropped instead of thrown? think about a tower not that high (centerpoint tower, assuming its on equator) and assume atmospheric friction has no result, will it orbit in the sky?Wrong. It will have a tangential velocity of the tower as according to Newton's FIRST law of motion, the object will maintain that motion. The velocity is large enough that the Earth will curve away as quickly as the object falls.