Chapter 13: Q88P (page 384)
With what speed would mail pass through the center of Earth if falling in a tunnel through the center?
Short Answer
Answer:
The speed of the mailpass through the center of Earth if falling in a tunnel through the centeris
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Chapter 13: Q88P (page 384)
With what speed would mail pass through the center of Earth if falling in a tunnel through the center?
Answer:
The speed of the mailpass through the center of Earth if falling in a tunnel through the centeris
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What are (a) the speed and (b) the period of asatellite in an approximately circular orbit above the surface of Earth? Suppose the satellite loses mechanical energy at the average rate of per orbital revolution. Adopting the reasonable approximation that the satellite鈥檚 orbit becomes a 鈥渃ircle of slowly diminishing radius,鈥 determine the satellite鈥檚
(c) altitude,(d) speed, and(e) period at the end of its 1500th revolution.
(f) What is the magnitude of the average retarding force on the satellite? Is angular momentum around Earth鈥檚 center conserved for (g) the satellite and(h) the satellite鈥揈arth system (assuming that system is isolated)?
Mile-high building.In 1956, Frank Lloyd Wright proposed the construction of a mile-high building in Chicago. Suppose the building had been constructed. Ignoring Earth鈥檚 rotation, find the change in your weight if you were to ride an elevator from the street level, where you weigh, to the top of the building.
The Sun and Earth each exert a gravitational force on theMoon. What is the ratioof these two forces? (The average Sun鈥揗oon distance is equal to the Sun鈥揈arth distance.)
Figure 13-22 shows three arrangements of the same identical particles, with three of them placed on a circle of radius 0.20mand the fourth one placed at the center of the circle. (a) Rank the arrangements according to the magnitude of the net gravitational force on the central particle due to the other three particles, greatest first. (b) Rank them according to the gravitational potential energy of the four-particle system, least negative first.

In Figure (a), particleAis fixed in place at on thexaxis and particleB, with a mass of 1.0 kg, is fixed in place at the origin. ParticleC(not shown) can be moved along thexaxis, between particleBand.Figure (b)shows thexcomponentof the net gravitational force on particleBdue to particlesAandC, as a function of positionxof particleC. The plot actually extends to the right, approaching an asymptote ofas. What are the masses of (a) particleAand (b) particleC?
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